nest microhabitat & reproductive success of the mountain white-crowned sparrow

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Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive Success of the Mountain White-crowned Sparrow Brett Klaassen Van Oorschot, Ondi Crino, and Creagh Breuner University of Montana

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Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive Success of the Mountain White-crowned Sparrow. Brett Klaassen Van Oorschot , Ondi Crino , and Creagh Breuner University of Montana. Mountain White-crowned Sparrows as a study system. Mountain White-crowned Sparrow ( Zonotrichia leucophrys oriantha ). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive Success of the Mountain White-crowned Sparrow

Brett Klaassen Van Oorschot, Ondi Crino, and Creagh BreunerUniversity of Montana

Page 2: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

Mountain White-crowned Sparrow (Zonotrichia leucophrys oriantha)

Mountain White-crowned Sparrows as a study system

Page 3: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

Question:Does nest microhabitat affect the reproductive success of these birds?

Brand-new fledgling

Context for Research

Page 4: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

(Google 2009)

Tioga Pass: the field site

Page 5: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

• Nests are built in a wide range of microhabitats.

• Over half of all nests fail, but ecological consequences are unknown.Specific Questions:

1. Does the vegetation surrounding the nest affect fledging success?

2. Does the vegetation surrounding the nest affect nestling condition?

Background

Page 6: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

Belding’s Ground Squirrel(Spermophilus beldingi)aka “Sage Rat” or “Picket-pin”

Fearsome and elusive predator of the Mountain White-crowned Sparrow.

Background

Page 7: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

• Nests are built in a wide range of microhabitats.

• Over half of all nests fail, but ecological consequences are unknown.

Specific Questions:1. Does the vegetation surrounding

the nest affect fledging success?

2. Does the vegetation surrounding the nest affect nestling condition?

Background

Page 8: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

Nest Searching….

Tioga Pass Meadow A well-hidden nest

Page 9: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

Morphological Measurements

Ondi Crino taking chick measurements Six-day-old nestling

Page 10: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

Habitat Assessment

Nest location

Short-hand sampling

• Measured 2m in each direction • Vegetation type and structure• Ground water availability• Nest height and aspect• 1777 individual samples with

over 26,665 possible datapoints for 37 nests.

Page 11: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

•Does the environment surrounding the nest affect fledging success?

•Does it affect individual nestling condition?

Nestlings waiting for lunch

Questions, revisited

Page 12: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

Principal Component Analysis

• Four main components in nest microhabitat

•PCA reduces variables to a few key factors

•Components inferred from correlations among variables (e.g. height & density)

•Relationships between vegetation were also common: More Lodgepole Pine means less Yellow Willow

Results

Page 13: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

No significant effect of vegetation on fledging success

p=0.40 p=0.97

p=0.93 p=0.70

Page 14: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

Nestlings raised in tall vegetation are lower condition

Results, cont.

Page 15: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

Nestling condition improves as season goes on

(June 14) (July 14)

Results, cont.

Page 16: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

Nest vegetation height causes decrease in conditionregardless of date

p=.03

Results, cont.

Page 17: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

• No effect of nest habitat on fledging success.

• Nests habitat is a poor predictor of fledging success.

• Sparrows on the ground and in willows or pines are equally likely to experience abandonment or predation.

• This data supports the idea that predation is random.

Discussion

Page 18: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

Discussion

• Nests built in tall vegetation have lower-condition nestlings.

• Difficult for parents to get into nests?

• Foraging occurs away from tall vegetation, leading to less provisioning?

• More time spent guarding or thermoregulating?

• Nestling condition increases with date.

• Food availability (bugs & open ground) increases over breeding season.

• Indicates trade-off between early mating and nestling condition.

Page 19: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

Ending Thoughts

•Mountain White-crowned Sparrows offer a unique opportunity to explore the consequences of nest ecology.

•Understanding ecology will help explain life-history, behavior, and physiology.

•Future directions include looking at generational effects on nesting behavior and ecology at other nesting sites.

Page 20: Nest Microhabitat & Reproductive  Success of the Mountain  White-crowned Sparrow

Ondi CrinoCreagh BreunerThe Breuner LabDoug EmlenBill HolbenPaul AlabackArt WoodsTom BassettJen SmithBret TobalskeUniv. of Montana MILES ProgramHHMI

Questions?

Acknowledgements & Questions

US FWS