2021
DOI: 10.1111/jofo.12358
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Cerulean Warblers in the Ozark region: habitat selection, breeding biology, survival, and space use

Abstract: Cerulean Warblers (Setophaga cerulea) are a species with declining populations that exhibit regional variation in habitat selection and demographic rates. The Ozark region of the south‐central United States likely provides important habitat for Cerulean Warblers, but little is known about their breeding biology in that region. We studied Cerulean Warblers in riparian forests of the Ozarks of Arkansas from 2018 to 2020. We assessed multi‐scale habitat selection for vegetative and topographic features, documente… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, LiDAR can also be used to predict space-use patterns across broad spatial extents using statistical models parameterized with these covariates (McNeil et al 2023). Still, although LiDAR were highly valuable for our purposes, it remains important to acknowledge that efforts that require speciescomposition data at any structural layer, or any aspect of ground vegetation, which are important for a variety of eastern forest warbler species (Bellush et al 2016, Bocetti et al 2020, Wessels and Boves 2021, still rely upon field sampling.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, LiDAR can also be used to predict space-use patterns across broad spatial extents using statistical models parameterized with these covariates (McNeil et al 2023). Still, although LiDAR were highly valuable for our purposes, it remains important to acknowledge that efforts that require speciescomposition data at any structural layer, or any aspect of ground vegetation, which are important for a variety of eastern forest warbler species (Bellush et al 2016, Bocetti et al 2020, Wessels and Boves 2021, still rely upon field sampling.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Like P. citrea, S. cerulea is a Nearctic‐Neotropical migrant with a patchy breeding distribution in eastern North America. However, in contrast to P. citrea , S. cerulea is a canopy open‐cup nester that breeds in mature hardwood forests (Buehler et al, 2020; Wessels & Boves, 2021), has an estimated population size of only 530,000 individuals (BirdLife International, 2023) and exhibits moderate migratory connectivity and parallel migration (Raybuck et al, 2022). Currently, very little is known about sex‐specific S. cerulea natal or breeding dispersal.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%