2008
DOI: 10.2193/2006-339
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Cerulean Warbler Reproduction, Survival, and Models of Population Decline

Abstract: We present and compare demographic data for cerulean warblers (Dendroica cerulea) from 5 study sites across the range of the species from 1992 to 2006. We conducted field studies to collect data on daily nest survival, nest success, and young fledged per successful nest, and we used data to estimate fecundity. Daily nest survival, nest success, young fledged, and fecundity varied widely across the cerulean range and among years. Study sites in agriculture‐dominated landscapes (Mississippi Alluvial Valley, IN, … Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…These sites were: Royal Blue Wildlife Management Area, TN (RB), Sundquist Forest, TN (SQ), Raccoon Ecological Management Area, OH (REMA), Daniel Boone National Forest, KY (DB), Lewis Wetzel Wildlife Management Area, WV (LW), Wyoming County, WV (WYO), and Monongahela National Forest, WV (MON). The two most southern sites (RB and SQ) were both located in the Cumberland Mountains, an ecophysiographically distinct section of the Appalachian chain [45], [46] that has previously been identified as a critical breeding locale for the species [47], [48]. Thus, we refer to these two sites hereafter as the “southern region” and the other five study sites as the “northern region.” Because cerulean warblers often require large tracts of contiguous forest [26], we selected sites embedded within a matrix of mature forest; mean percent forest cover within 10 km of the site center was 83.2±2.8 [SE]% (range = 74–95%, 2001 NLCD).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…These sites were: Royal Blue Wildlife Management Area, TN (RB), Sundquist Forest, TN (SQ), Raccoon Ecological Management Area, OH (REMA), Daniel Boone National Forest, KY (DB), Lewis Wetzel Wildlife Management Area, WV (LW), Wyoming County, WV (WYO), and Monongahela National Forest, WV (MON). The two most southern sites (RB and SQ) were both located in the Cumberland Mountains, an ecophysiographically distinct section of the Appalachian chain [45], [46] that has previously been identified as a critical breeding locale for the species [47], [48]. Thus, we refer to these two sites hereafter as the “southern region” and the other five study sites as the “northern region.” Because cerulean warblers often require large tracts of contiguous forest [26], we selected sites embedded within a matrix of mature forest; mean percent forest cover within 10 km of the site center was 83.2±2.8 [SE]% (range = 74–95%, 2001 NLCD).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We employed a deterministic population model, following Buehler et al [47], to explore how the reproductive consequences of our treatments may affect regional source-sink dynamics. Input parameters included regionally and treatment-specific nest success and number of young produced/successful nest (as we detected regional variability in reproductive output, see results) derived from this study, as well as external estimates of after-hatch-year (AHY) and hatch-year (HY) survival, proportion of individuals that attempt to re-nest after failing, and number of re-nesting attempts.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For sites that had >5 nests, average daily survival for Cerulean Warblers ranged from 0.936 to 0.985 and averaged 0.951 AE 0.006 S.E. across all sites, which corresponds to 19-69% nesting success based on a 25-day nesting period (Buehler et al, 2008). Using Program Mark, the best temporal model explaining daily Several vegetation features explained variation in daily nest survival (Table 6).…”
Section: Daily Nest Survivalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The UMRS provides critical nesting habitat for many migratory birds including the Cerulean Warbler, a species that has declined at a rate equal to or exceeding those of all other Nearctic‐Neotropical migratory birds (Buehler et al ). This species was selected as a focal species by the U.S.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%