2023
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.4429
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Point‐scale habitat and weather patterns influence the distribution of regal fritillaries in the central United States

Abstract: Conservationists and scientists throughout the world consider butterflies important indicators of broadscale factors affecting global biodiversity. And like other facets of biodiversity, declines in many butterfly populations appear related to human activities, and the potential of their extinction could jeopardize key ecosystem services. The regal fritillary (Argynnis idalia), a butterfly associated with tall-and mixed-grass prairies in the United States, is a species currently being considered for federal pr… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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“…An important caveat to these findings is that surveys such as the CBC aggregate site-specific observations to circle-level counts, leaving lower-level variation unrecoverable. 58 The present study is therefore unable to detect localized avoidance behaviors such as those measured in Shaffer and Buhl, 21 and lacks the statistical precision to identify small numbers of collision deaths, such as those counted in Loss et al 27 Nevertheless, it is noteworthy that the same empirical strategy that fails to detect significant effects of wind turbines on birds at the circle-level nevertheless detects significant and robust negative effects of shale oil and gas wells. This contrast may be due to the scale of treatment (i.e., there are more than twice as many shale oil and gas wells as wind turbines constructed during the 2000−2020 period) and intensity of treatment (i.e., shale oil gas wells generate constant noise and light pollution, water disturbances, and road traffic).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 72%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…An important caveat to these findings is that surveys such as the CBC aggregate site-specific observations to circle-level counts, leaving lower-level variation unrecoverable. 58 The present study is therefore unable to detect localized avoidance behaviors such as those measured in Shaffer and Buhl, 21 and lacks the statistical precision to identify small numbers of collision deaths, such as those counted in Loss et al 27 Nevertheless, it is noteworthy that the same empirical strategy that fails to detect significant effects of wind turbines on birds at the circle-level nevertheless detects significant and robust negative effects of shale oil and gas wells. This contrast may be due to the scale of treatment (i.e., there are more than twice as many shale oil and gas wells as wind turbines constructed during the 2000−2020 period) and intensity of treatment (i.e., shale oil gas wells generate constant noise and light pollution, water disturbances, and road traffic).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 72%
“…An important caveat to these findings is that surveys such as the CBC aggregate site-specific observations to circle-level counts, leaving lower-level variation unrecoverable . The present study is therefore unable to detect localized avoidance behaviors such as those measured in Shaffer and Buhl, and lacks the statistical precision to identify small numbers of collision deaths, such as those counted in Loss et al Nevertheless, it is noteworthy that the same empirical strategy that fails to detect significant effects of wind turbines on birds at the circle-level nevertheless detects significant and robust negative effects of shale oil and gas wells.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%