Avian Ecology Lab
Project Director:
Reed Bowman Post-doctoral Associates: David A. Aborn Research
Assistants: Patricia M. Barber, Michelle L. Dent, Arthur L.
Fleischer, Craig A. Faulhaber, Taber Loree, Donnelle L. Schwalm, Seth
Stapleton, Diana Swan
Graduate Student Intern: Matthew D. Shawkey, University of
South Florida Interns: Sonya C. LeClair, University of Vermont;
Arieh M. Levine, Wake Forest University; Brent J. Sewell, Penn State
University Volunteers: Sabina Pfister, Dietliken, Switzerland Outside
Collaborators: G. Thomas Bancroft, The Wilderness Society; David
R. Breininger, Dynamac Inc., NASA; Robert L. Curry, Villanova
University; Hugh I. Ellis, San Diego University; John W. Fitzpatrick,
Cornell University; Nathalie Hamel, University of Washington; David L.
Leonard, University of Florida; John Marzluff, University of
Washington; Stephan J. Schoech, University of Memphis; Bradley M.
Stith, University of Florida
[Biennial Contents |
Biennial
97-98 | Research]
Life history strategies of species are finely-tuned to their
environment through natural selection. However, human alterations of
those environments occur at a variety of ecological and spatial scales;
from alterations in the composition and availability of foods, to
changes in the structure and composition of vegetative communities,
changes in predator community structure and composition, alteration in
spatial and temporal regimes of ecological processes such as fire, and
broad-scale changes in the structure and composition of entire landscape
mosaics. Species may be able to respond to some of these anthropogenic
changes or they may be evolutionarily constrained. Research in the Avian
Ecology Lab focuses on understanding many of these anthropogenic
ecological changes and their impact on birds at a variety of scales,
from physiological and behavioral responses to population and community
responses. We use a combination of longitudinal, observational studies
and controlled experiments to identify ecological patterns and then to
test the effects of specific variables. In particular, our research has
focused on the effects of urbanization on the demography and social
biology of the Florida scrub-jay (Aphelocoma coerulescens) and on
the effects of multiple resource management (grazing, forestry, human
recreation, military training, and endangered species management) on
both Florida scrub-jays and red-cockaded woodpeckers (Picoides
borealis), both federally-listed species. Here, we discuss just a
few of our research approaches.
Anthropogenic effects on bottom-up mechanisms of population
regulation. An active area of theoretical and empirical interest in
ecology is the relative importance of top-down (predators and parasites)
versus bottom-up (food or productivity) influences on the regulation of
populations. Urbanization is likely to strongly affect both the
availability of food (reduction in natural foods, availability of
anthropogenic foods) and the composition of the predator community
(introduction of novel predators and changes in the abundance of native
predators). Our research has increasingly focused on bottom-up processes
regulating suburban scrub-jay populations. Urbanization does influence
predator communities, but these changes do not appear to influence nest
success rates of urban-nesting scrub-jays. However, urbanization
decreases arthropod populations and scrub-jays in suburban habitats make
fewer trips and deliver less food to nestlings than jays in natural
habitats. As a consequence, within-brood size asymmetries and brood
reduction are higher, and fledgling production and post-fledgling
survival are lower than in the jay population at Archbold. To test if
these patterns were related to differences in food, we experimentally
provisioned young nestlings with a high-protein supplemental diet.
Supplementation decreased brood reduction and increased the number of
fledglings and their post-fledgling survival, suggesting that diet may
be limiting productivity. However, jays readily use anthropogenic
sources of food, such as bird feeders, peanuts, and pet foods. Access to
supplemental food results in earlier laying dates and decreased
between-year variation in laying date. We know little about the cues
birds use for making reproductive decisions, but when anthropogenic
changes alter the predictive value of those cues, an inappropriate
response may occur. Although earlier breeders have better nest success,
suburban scrub-jays did poorest relative to scrub-jays in natural
habitats when the difference in laying date was greatest. If jays use
supplemental food as a cue, they may initiate breeding early in years
when arthropod abundance is delayed and delaying breeding is the
appropriate response (see Fig. 1, below). To assess the mechanisms by
which supplemental food affects timing of breeding, we have collaborated
with Steve Schoech to conduct controlled supplemental feeding
experiments on jays at Archbold, where we vary the nutritional content
of the food. The experiments are designed to assess whether specific
nutrients, such as protein or lipids, mediate physiological precursors
to breeding or whether the spatial and temporal predictability of food
serves as a cue.
Habitat fragmentation and effects on dispersal and metapopulation
dynamics. Spatially-explicit population models depend, in part, upon
empirical data on the movement patterns of individuals across spatially
heterogenous landscapes, yet few of these data exist. Florida scrub-jays
are relatively sedentary, frequently dispersing only one or two
territories from home. Yet habitat fragmentation reduces the size of
habitat patches, reducing the number of contiguous jay territories,
increases the distance between patches, and alters the habitat types
that occupy the matrix (see map, this page). Jays may readily move when
they can perceive other jay territories, but some may decide to disperse
beyond their perceptual limits. We developed a series of logistic
regression models to examine under which set of demographic, social, and
landscape conditions are male and female jays more likely to disperse
beyond their local neighborhood. Females are more likely to disperse
beyond their perceptual range than males. Females were more apt to leave
if their natal patches consisted of few territories with poor demography
success. Males were more apt to leave if they were young, and their
natal patches consisted of many territories with good demographic
success. Males may leave to avoid competition, but females may leave to
improve their probability of finding a mate. We also are using
radio-telemetry to assess movement patterns of pre-breeding jays as they
explore their landscape and GIS models to examine the characteristics
and size distributions of habitat gaps dispersing birds must have
crossed to get from one point in a landscape to another. All these data
can improve the validity of movement decision rules in
spatially-explicit population models. With several outside
collaborators, we are using spatially-explicit models to account for the
differing effects of habitat fragmentation, isolation, and patch size on
the extinction vulnerability of different jay metapopulations.
All our long-term demographic studies on Florida scrub-jays and
red-cockaded woodpeckers continue. Cumulatively, we have over 20 years
of detailed demographic data from our marked populations of birds.
Fig. 1. Variation in the timing of breeding between Florida scrub-jay populations in suburban and natural scrub and between-year patterns relative to the long-term mean date of first clutch
initiation.
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