4.4 Article

SCRUB-SHRUB BIRD HABITAT ASSOCIATIONS AT MULTIPLE SPATIAL SCALES IN BEAVER MEADOWS IN MASSACHUSETTS

Journal

AUK
Volume 126, Issue 1, Pages 186-197

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1525/auk.2009.08083

Keywords

American Beaver; Castor canadensis; detectability; early-successional habitat; N-mixture model; shrubland

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Funding

  1. Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife
  2. U.S. Geological Survey

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Most scrub-shrub bird species are declining in the northeastern United States, and these declines are largely attributed to regional declines in habitat availability. American Beaver (Castor canadensis; hereafter beaver) populations have been increasing in the Northeast in recent decades, and beavers create scrub-shrub habitat through their dam-building and foraging activities. Few systematic studies have been conducted on the value of beaver-modified habitats for scrub-shrub birds, and these data are important for understanding habitat selection of scrub-shrub birds as well as for assessing regional habitat availability for these species. We conducted surveys in 37 beaver meadows in a 2,800-km(2) study area in western Massachusetts during 2005 and 2006 to determine the extent to which these beaver-modified habitats are used by scrub-shrub birds, as well as the characteristics of beaver meadows most closely related to bird use. We modeled bird abundance in relation to microhabitat-, patch-, and landscape-context variables while adjusting for survey-specific covariates affecting detectability using N-mixture models. We found that scrub-shrub birds of regional conservation concern occupied these sites and that birds responded differently to microhabitat, patch, and landscape characteristics of beaver meadows. Generally, scrub-shrub birds increased in abundance along a gradient of increasing vegetation complexity, and three species were positively related to patch size. We conclude that these habitats can potentially play an important role in regional conservation of scrub-shrub birds and recommend that conservation priority be given to larger beaver meadows with diverse vegetation structure and composition. Received 8 May 2008, accepted 1 October 2008.

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