Assessing American woodcock use of habitat managed through programs targeting a declining songbird

Author:

McNeil Darin J.1ORCID,Johnson Kirsten E.2,Larkin Jeffery L.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Forestry and Natural Resources University of Kentucky Lexington KY 40508 USA

2. Department of Biology Indiana University of Pennsylvania Weyandt Hall, Room 114 Indiana PA 15701 USA

3. Department of Biology Indiana University of Pennsylvania Weyandt Hall, Room 114, American Bird Conservancy The Plains VA 20198 USA

Abstract

AbstractThe implementation of habitat management guidelines for golden‐winged warblers (Vermivora chrysoptera) is believed to benefit additional species. To address widespread population declines of the golden‐winged warbler, species‐specific best management practices were developed and are guiding habitat‐based conservation programs across the species' breeding range. To date, thousands of hectares of golden‐winged warbler nesting habitat have been created across portions of the Appalachian Mountains and Great Lakes regions in the United States. The American woodcock (Scolopax minor) is expected to benefit from this habitat management. The woodcock has been declining for decades (0.84%/year in the eastern United States) largely because of loss of early successional communities like those required by the golden‐winged warbler. We examined the extent to which habitat management targeting golden‐winged warblers contributes to American woodcock conservation goals across a broad geographic extent. Additionally, we assessed various site‐ and landscape‐level factors to elucidate the context dependencies associated with successful conservation outcomes for this non‐target species. From 2015 to 2017, we conducted 1,554 American woodcock surveys at 774 unique locations treated with golden‐winged warbler best management practices across the Great Lakes and Appalachian Mountains. Woodcock density was 0.84–1.24 males/ha in the Great Lakes region and 0.30 males/ha in the Appalachian Mountains. Density was also dependent upon within‐stand conditions (e.g., basal area, woody regeneration) and landscape features (e.g., wetland cover, mixed forest cover), the latter of which yielded strong geographic heterogeneity in woodcock densities. American woodcock can benefit from habitat management targeting the golden‐winged warbler, but the extent of these benefits is influenced by regional, landscape, and within‐stand contexts.

Funder

Natural Resources Conservation Service

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference96 articles.

1. American Woodcock and Golden-Winged Warbler Abundance and Associated Vegetation in Managed Habitats

2. Response of several game species, with emphasis on woodcock, to extensive habitat manipulations;Bennett C. L.;Proceedings of the American Woodcock Symposium,1982

3. The history and importance of private lands for North American waterfowl conservation

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