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Relative effects of landscape and local habitat characteristics on grassland songbird abundance and occurrence in southwestern Manitoba

I investigated the relative effects of grassland cover and fragmentation per se, and the relative influence of landscape and local habitat characteristics on grasslands songbirds in the moist mixed-grass prairies of Manitoba. In 2013, 361 avian point counts were conducted across 47, 2.4-km radii landscapes in the southwest part of the province. I used an information-theoretic approach to rank and select models describing effects of landscape and local-scale habitat variables on grassland songbird abundance and occurrence. Overall, my results indicate that grassland amount, fragmentation and quality, and matrix composition had relatively small and variable effects on grassland songbird abundance and occurrence, but that abundance of obligate species when pooled showed a strong negative response to grassland fragmentation. While fragmentation through edge effects may contribute to obligate species declines, my results suggest that these factors alone are unlikely to explain ongoing declines of grassland birds in southwestern Manitoba. / October 2016

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:MANITOBA/oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/31753
Date14 September 2016
CreatorsLockhart, Jessica
ContributorsKoper, Nicola (Natural Resources Institute), Manseau, Micheline (Natural Resources Institute) Fahrig, Lenore (Carleton University, Department of Biology)
Source SetsUniversity of Manitoba Canada
Detected LanguageEnglish

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