1999
DOI: 10.2307/4089673
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Effects of Forest Roads on Habitat Quality for Ovenbirds in a Forested Landscape

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Cited by 94 publications
(57 citation statements)
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“…Even small increases in edge habitat can lead to increased nest predation and parasitism by cowbirds (Ortega and Capen, 1999). For example, fragmentation and perhaps subsequent increases in cowbird parasitism have been linked with the decline of the Audubon's oriole, one of the highprofile bird species in the LRGV (e.g., Brush, 2005).…”
Section: Border Issues and Homeland Securitymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Even small increases in edge habitat can lead to increased nest predation and parasitism by cowbirds (Ortega and Capen, 1999). For example, fragmentation and perhaps subsequent increases in cowbird parasitism have been linked with the decline of the Audubon's oriole, one of the highprofile bird species in the LRGV (e.g., Brush, 2005).…”
Section: Border Issues and Homeland Securitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Construction of roads in forested habitats increases habitat fragmentation, and multiple studies show that even small amounts of habitat fragmentation increase edge habitat, which can adversely affect certain bird species (e.g., Askins and others, 1990;Askins, 1994;Paton, 1994;Ortega and Capen, 1999). Even small increases in edge habitat can lead to increased nest predation and parasitism by cowbirds (Ortega and Capen, 1999).…”
Section: Border Issues and Homeland Securitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These changes, such as increased wind, light, and ambient temperatures, can negatively affect ground-foraging species by reducing litter depth and densities of litter-dwelling arthropods near forest edges (Ortega and Capen 1999). Some mature forest-dependent species such as the cerulean warbler reach their highest densities in large tracts of mature forest and away from abrupt edges (Wood and others 2006).…”
Section: Locate Reforestation Efforts Where They Maximize Benefits Fomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ovenbirds nest in mature deciduous and mixed forests and are known to prefer large blocks of continuous forests with structural diversity and high canopy closure (60-90%) (McGowan and Corwin 2008). Ovenbirds are negatively impacted by fragmentation, where nesting success declines as the percentage of forest in the landscape decreases (Robinson et al 1995) and as the distance to edge decreases (Ortega and Capen 1999). Ovenbirds respond negatively to forest roads, power lines, and chronic noise (Ortega and Capen 1999;Porneluzi 2011).…”
Section: Target Speciesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ovenbirds are negatively impacted by fragmentation, where nesting success declines as the percentage of forest in the landscape decreases (Robinson et al 1995) and as the distance to edge decreases (Ortega and Capen 1999). Ovenbirds respond negatively to forest roads, power lines, and chronic noise (Ortega and Capen 1999;Porneluzi 2011). As territorial breeders, Ovenbirds are a good target species for calculating N k through time.…”
Section: Target Speciesmentioning
confidence: 99%