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Multiscale relationships of wintering birds with riparian and wetland habitat in the Willamette Valley, Oregon

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Title Multiscale relationships of wintering birds with riparian and wetland habitat in the Willamette Valley, Oregon
Names Adamus, Paul R. (creator)
Noss, Reed F. (advisor)
Date Issued 2002-01-28 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2002
Abstract Relatively little is known about wintering bird communities in lowlands of
the Pacific Northwest, yet, the condition of winter habitats potentially can pose a
major constraint on bird populations. I initiated a study to determine: (1) Which
avian species use lowland riparian and wetland habitats in the Willamette Valley
during winter, and with what intraseasonal regularity? (2) To what extent are these
species associated - individually and collectively - with landscape and site-scale
habitat variables? (3) To what extent are these species associated - individually
and collectively - with particular landscape vs. site-scale variables? (4) How are
the apparent associations affected by survey procedures and data analysis methods?
Two survey procedures (area counts and point counts) in 1995 and 1996
found 104 species during 10 visits to 142 riparian and wetland sites. Area counts
mainly surveyed waterbirds and raptors; point counts surveyed passerines. From
area counts, mean richness ranged 0 toll species among sites and 1 to 5 species
among weeks at an average site; mean number of individuals ranged 0 to 1016
among sites and from 6 to 199 among weeks at an average site. From point counts,
richness ranged 1 to 6 species both among sites and among weeks at an average
site. Mean number of individuals ranged 0 to 1016 per site and 6 to 199 among
weeks at an average site.
I individually examined 64 species to identify relative degree of association
with site-scale and landscape variables. Winter Wren, Bewick's Wren, Hutton's Vireo, and Varied Thrush were significantly associated with woody cover at
one or more spatial scales. Passerine abundance was greatest at sites with slowflowing
water. Richness was associated with soil inundation category, peaking at
intermediate frequencies and interacting with canopy cover and wooded patch
extent. Richness of non-passerines was greater where standing water occupied
>6% of the landscape nearest the site. Conclusions for many species and
community metrics were sensitive to choice of survey methods, variables,
measurement procedures, and statistical analysis tests. Ratings generated by
OFWAM, a general tool for categorizing overall wetland habitat quality, did not
significantly parallel measured richness and abundance of wintering birds.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Wetland ecology -- Oregon -- Willamette River Valley
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/20171

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