Tricolored blackbird survey methods

Author:

Airola Daniel1ORCID,Beedy Edward C.2,Sanders Susan3,Medley Joseph4

Affiliation:

1. Conservation and Research Planning

2. Beedy Environmental Consulting

3. AECOM

4. USDA Forest Service

Abstract

Surveys for the tricolored blackbird (Agelaius tricolor), a California-listed threatened species, are needed to provide essential information about its status and distribution to support conservation efforts. Surveying for the species, however, poses challenges because of its colonial nesting habits, large flock sizes, and frequent interannual movements among colony sites. We present standardized approaches for tricolored blackbird surveys to accommodate a variety of goals, including determining potential for occurrence, detecting colonies, estimating population numbers, and assessing nesting success. Pre-survey research should assess overlap with the species’ geographic range and include database searches for recent and historical occurrences. Site surveys should assess availability of sufficient suitable foraging habitat (grasslands, irrigated pasture, shallow wetlands, agricultural fields) within 5 km of potential nesting habitat and nearby drinking water. Confirming presence or absence of nesting at a historical colony site, or at an area within the range of the tricolored blackbird that provides suitable nesting and foraging habitat, requires at least three surveys conducted about three weeks apart during the breeding season, generally April, May, and June in most of the species’ range. Colonies can be located by searching for foraging flocks and following them to colonies and by checking for nesting activity at suitable nesting substrates, especially those used in the past. Surveyors can estimate numbers from counts of foraging flocks departing and arriving at colonies, average density and area occupied by the nesting colony, and post-nesting density transects. Colony nesting success (i.e., whether a colony successfully fledged some young), is easily determined and is often the only feasible metric to attain on reproduction. Determining reproductive success (the average number of young fledged per occupied nest) may be feasible under ideal and intensive surveys but is impractical at many colonies due to accessibility limitations.

Publisher

California Fish and Wildlife Journal, California Department of Fish and Wildlife

Reference37 articles.

1. • Airola, D. A. 2021. Importance of non-native Himalayan blackberry as nesting habitat for the tricolored blackbird in the Sierra Nevada foothills, California. Central Valley Birds 24:1–14.

2. • Airola, D. A., T. Collins, M. Lozano, C. McColl, B. J. Furnas, and D. R. Krolick. 2023a. Foraging habitat and its effects on tricolored blackbird distribution and abundance in the Sierra Nevada foothills, California. Western Birds 54:19–31.

3. • Airola, D. A., J. Harris, C. Conard, L. A. Douglas, and E. C. Beedy. 2023b. Breeding population status of the tricolored blackbird in the foothills of the central Sierra Nevada, 2014–2022. Central Valley Birds 26:53–68.

4. • Airola, D. A., R. J. Meese, E. C. Beedy, D. Ross, D. Lasprugato, W. Hall, C. Conard, C. Alvarado, J. Harris, M. Gause, L. Pittman, K Smith, L. Young, and J. Pan. 2015. Tricolored blackbird breeding status in 2015 in the foothill grasslands of the Sierra Nevada, California. Central Valley Bird Club Bulletin 18:96–113.

5. • Airola, D. A., C. W. Swarth, J. Harris, E. C. Beedy, G. Woods, K. Smith, D. Ross, and D. Lasprugato. 2018. Breeding status of the tricolored blackbird in the foothill grasslands of the Sierra Nevada, California. Central Valley Bird Club Bulletin 21:1–24.

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