4.3 Article

USE OF BREEDING AND NONBREEDING ENCOUNTERS TO ESTIMATE SURVIVAL AND BREEDING-SITE FIDELITY OF THE PIPING PLOVER AT THE GREAT LAKES

Journal

CONDOR
Volume 112, Issue 4, Pages 637-643

Publisher

COOPER ORNITHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1525/cond.2010.100017

Keywords

Barker model; capture-mark-recapture; Charadrius melodus; Piping Plover; breeding site fidelity; survival

Categories

Funding

  1. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
  2. Michigan Department of Natural Resources
  3. Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station
  4. University of Minnesota Interdisciplinary Center for the Study of Global Change

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In the Great Lakes region, numbers of the Piping Plover (Charadrius melodus) are gradually increasing, but the population of <100 pairs is still at risk of extinction and remains sensitive to fluctuations in adult survival. Given the central role of adult survival in population recovery, an accurate estimate of this quantity is essential. Using a Barker model and 11 years of mark-resighting data of breeding and nonbreeding Piping Plovers (1998-2008), we estimated true adult survival (S), probability of detection of breeding birds (p), probability of detection nonbreeding birds (R), and site fidelity (F). Adults' survival rate averaged 0.76 but with considerable annual process variation (sigma = 0.05) and strong evidence of decline over this period. The probability of detection of breeding birds was near perfect (p = 1.00, 95% Cl 0.97-1.00), but probabilities of detection of nonbreeders were substantially lower, although they increased from approximately 0.25 to 0.50 through the study period because of increased effort in observation and reporting. The birds' fidelity to the area of the Great Lakes in which they were monitored was high (<(x)over bar> = 0.91, 95% Cl 0.66-0.98), with evidence of an increase through time that we attribute to increased intensity of monitoring. Evidence for a decline in true adult survival over nearly a decade suggests a pressing need for research on the timing and causes of adult mortality in this population.

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