2022
DOI: 10.1002/eap.2726
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Range‐wide sources of variation in reproductive rates of northern spotted owls

Abstract: We conducted a range‐wide investigation of the dynamics of site‐level reproductive rate of northern spotted owls using survey data from 11 study areas across the subspecies geographic range collected during 1993–2018. Our analytical approach accounted for imperfect detection of owl pairs and misclassification of successful reproduction (i.e., at least one young fledged) and contributed further insights into northern spotted owl population ecology and dynamics. Both nondetection and state misclassification were… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…We believe it was reasonable to expect that spotted owls may respond to the intensity of barred owl vocal activity, not just presence or absence of barred owls, as these calls are used for territorial defense and interspecific competition. We estimated that there was a 0.89 probability that spotted owls were less likely to be paired when using hexagons with high amounts of barred owl calling activity, which is consistent with evidence that competition by barred owls may suppress spotted owl recruitment and other demographic rates (Franklin et al, 2021;Rockweit et al, 2022;Wiens et al, 2021). We found no effect of barred owl calling intensity on detection probability of spotted owls and only weak evidence of a negative effect on the probability of landscape use.…”
Section: Parametersupporting
confidence: 84%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…We believe it was reasonable to expect that spotted owls may respond to the intensity of barred owl vocal activity, not just presence or absence of barred owls, as these calls are used for territorial defense and interspecific competition. We estimated that there was a 0.89 probability that spotted owls were less likely to be paired when using hexagons with high amounts of barred owl calling activity, which is consistent with evidence that competition by barred owls may suppress spotted owl recruitment and other demographic rates (Franklin et al, 2021;Rockweit et al, 2022;Wiens et al, 2021). We found no effect of barred owl calling intensity on detection probability of spotted owls and only weak evidence of a negative effect on the probability of landscape use.…”
Section: Parametersupporting
confidence: 84%
“…These persistent population declines are driven primarily by continued loss of old forest due to large wildfires and timber harvest on non‐federal lands as well as by competition and displacement by congeneric barred owls ( Strix varia ), a recent newcomer to the Pacific Northwest (Davis et al, 2022; Franklin et al, 2021; Lesmeister et al, 2018). Barred owls have been linked to changes in spotted owl behavior and ecology such as reduced niche space, increased adult dispersal, and decreased survival and reproduction (Jenkins et al, 2021; Jenkins, Lesmeister, Forsman, et al, 2019; Jenkins, Lesmeister, Wiens, et al, 2019; Lesmeister et al, 2018; Rockweit et al, 2022; Wiens et al, 2021). Without management intervention, competition by barred owls in combination with declining habitat conditions is expected to cause extirpation of northern spotted owls from parts of their range in the coming decades (Franklin et al, 2021; Yackulic et al, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…GNN models are mapped predictions of forest structure and composition across broad landscapes based on FIA plot data and Landsat imagery (Bell et al, 2021). The spotted owl monitoring program has a long history of using GNN data as territory-scale habitat covariates for modeling the effects of forest disturbance, structure, and tree species composition on spotted owl dispersal, distribution, and population trends within the eight historical study areas (Jenkins et al, 2019a(Jenkins et al, , 2021Franklin et al, 2021;Davis et al, 2022;Rockweit et al, 2022). By integrating next generation survey methods throughout the entire spotted owl range, the monitoring program could further leverage the potential of range-wide FIA-derived models as spatially explicit predictors of spotted owl distribution and population change.…”
Section: Northern Spotted Owl Monitoring Under Transition: Challenges...mentioning
confidence: 99%