4.7 Article

The snag's the limit: Habitat selection modeling for the western purple martin in a managed forest landscape

Journal

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 480, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2020.118689

Keywords

Songbird; Swallow; Cavity-nesters; Early seral forest; Aerial insectivore; Habitat selection

Categories

Funding

  1. Interagency Special Status/Sensitive Species Program [2017] [L16PG00043]
  2. Purple Martin Conservation Association [2019-640]

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The western purple martin requires nesting habitat with moderately decayed snags in open areas away from closed-canopy forest. Suitable habitat is rare within the study region.
The western purple martin (Progne subis arboricola), an avian insectivore, is a species of conservation concern throughout the Pacific Northwest. Compared to the well-studied eastern subspecies (Progne subis subis), little is known of the life history and biology of the western subspecies. Availability of breeding habitat is believed to be a major limiting factor for western purple martins in forested habitat, but fundamental information on their current distribution and selection of nesting habitat is deficient. To fill this gap, we compared habitat characteristics at three spatial scales (snag-level, stand-level [48.6 ha], landscape-level [314 ha]) surrounding nest snags occupied by purple martins in western Oregon to unoccupied sites. We found habitat for nesting purple martins was defined by the presence of moderately decayed snags with nest cavities, located well away from closed-canopy forest in sufficiently large (>15 ha) open areas. Our modeling efforts suggested suitable habitat was rare within the study region because: 1) snags were scarce on private industrial forest lands and 2) large disturbed patches were uncommon on federal lands. We conclude that a disturbance regime characterized by infrequent but major stand-replacing events, such as fire or timber harvest, is likely the key to maintaining breeding habitat for purple martins in upland forests in western Oregon.

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