4.4 Article

SURVIVAL OF RESIDENT NEOTROPICAL BIRDS: CONSIDERATIONS FOR SAMPLING AND ANALYSIS BASED ON 20 YEARS OF BIRD-BANDING EFFORTS IN MEXICO

Journal

AUK
Volume 129, Issue 3, Pages 500-509

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1525/auk.2012.11171

Keywords

Barker model; mark-recapture statistics; mist netting; population modeling; tropical birds

Categories

Funding

  1. Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology (CLO)
  2. MacArthur Foundation
  3. Department of Fish, Wildlife and Conservation Biology
  4. Colorado AGEP Postdoctoral Fellowship Program
  5. Universidad de Guadalajara
  6. CONACYT
  7. CONANP
  8. Point Reyes Bird Observatory
  9. Rocky Mountain Bird Observatory
  10. CLO
  11. Catalan Institute of Ornithology
  12. University of Wisconsin-Madison
  13. University of Arizona-Tucson
  14. San Francisco State University
  15. World Wildlife Fund
  16. National Fish and Wildlife Foundation
  17. Audubon Society of Greater Denver
  18. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
  19. U.S.-A.I.D.
  20. U.S. Forest Service
  21. National Institutes of Health MIRT program
  22. Grace J. Calder Trust
  23. General Services Foundation
  24. Colorado Wildlife Heritage Foundation
  25. Vilas Scholarship
  26. WWF-International Prince Bernhard Fellowship
  27. Paul and Bay Foundations

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Long-term bird-banding programs provide knowledge of the demographic rates of avian populations, but we currently lack information on demographic rates of most bird populations in species-rich tropical ecosystems. Banding in tropical regions is typically conducted with protracted or irregular sampling occasions that make the choice of the proper capture mark recapture (CMR) model difficult. Here, we address common challenges related to collecting and analyzing data to estimate survival rates of resident Neotropical birds using 20 years of banding efforts in Mexico as a case study. We applied Cormack-Jolly-Seber and Barker models to estimate apparent survival and recapture probabilities of species with sufficient data for survival analyses. We were able to analyze 6 resident species of 136 total species; apparent survival probabilities ranged from 0.30 to 0.77, and recapture probabilities from 0.11 to 0.52. For monitoring programs with existing data collected at continuous, uneven, or irregular intervals, we recommend the application of the Barker model over other models because it was more efficient in the use of available banding data and less often violated CMR assumptions. We recommend that monitoring programs last >10 years and provide additional protocol suggestions for primary and secondary sampling occasions, as well as the number of nets, potential net configurations, and the extent of the spatial scale. These baseline recommendations are likely to foster an increase in our knowledge of avian survival rates in tropical ecosystems, which is imperative for managing tropical bird populations under changing environmental conditions. Received 3 August 2011, accepted 17 April 2012.

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