Songbird Nesting Ecology in the Pine Barrens of Northwestern Wisconsin

File(s)
Date
2002-08Author
Ryba, Adam J.
Publisher
University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, College of Natural Resources
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Grassland and shrubland bird species of the East and the Midwest have
declined at greater rates than any other avian guild in North America. In northwestern
Wisconsin pine barrens, prescribed fire has been used to maintain early successional
savanna habitat previously created by wildfire. However large-block timber harvest is
being used more frequently to provide similar early successional habitat. I evaluated
songbird nesting ecology in wildlife areas managed with prescribed fire and areas
recently harvested due to a jack pine budworm (Choristoneura pinus) outbreak during the
1990s. I examined site selection and success of nests in both management types. In 2000
and 2001, 176 nests were located on reserves managed with fire and 182 were located on
clearcuts and followed until nest fate was determined. Vegetation measurements were
taken at all nests to determine factors influencing nest-site selection and nest fate.
Discriminant function analyses were used to determine nest site characteristics of
8 species based on microhabitat and fine-scale vegetation measurements. Clay-colored
sparrow nest placement in managed areas was more variable than in unmanaged
landscapes, where nests were almost exclusively located in shrubs. Yellow warbler nests
were typically found in very dense stands of hazelnut with high visual obstruction
measurements and a high amount of live vegetation. Brown thrashers and Eastern
towhees selected areas on the ground usually centered under a willow or similar shrub
species. Other ground nesting species, including Brewer's blackbirds, song sparrows and
vesper sparrows, selected areas with more grass, and less green vegetation. Classification
success was lower for these species, indicating that they nest in similar areas.
The apparent influence of disturbance type on nesting success changed depending
on the analysis. Raw nesting success (successful nests/ nests found) indicated that
disturbance type did not influence reproductive success. When exposure days (the
amount of time nests were observed) were examined, nesting success differed among
species and between disturbance types. However, the effect of disturbance type was
reduced or removed when vegetation and landscape characteristics were also considered.
Clay-colored sparrows and Brewer's blackbirds had higher nesting success in unmanaged
areas, whereas yellow warblers and Eastern kingbirds had higher nesting success in
managed areas. Song sparrows and Eastern towhees also had higher nesting success on
managed areas, but results are based on limited sample sizes of 19 and 26 nests,
respectively. All nests were examined for presence of brown-headed cowbird eggs at
each nest visit. Parasitism rates by brown-headed cowbirds were very low on both
managed and unmanaged sites (0.032, and 0.01 respectively).
Vegetation and landscape characteristics were used to construct logistic exposure
models attempting to determine factors influencing songbird nesting success. The
amount of time a nest was observed was built into the logistic regression models.
Distance from the nearest tree or distance from the forest edge influenced nesting success
in 6 of the 8 species examined. Although I did find differences in Mayfield nesting
success between management types for some species, management type was not a strong
factor influencing nesting success in logistic exposure models that incorporated landscape
and vegetation characteristics. Incorporating large scale timber cuts in the pine barrens
will likely provide early successional habitat many of these bird species can utilize and
successfully produce offspring.
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/80931Type
Thesis
