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Saracco, J. F., D. F. DeSante, and D. R. Kaschube.
2008. Assessing landbird monitoring programs and demographic causes
of population trends. Journal of Wildlife Management. 72:1665-1673.
JAMES
F. SARACCO, DAVID F. DESANTE, DANIELLE R. KASCHUBE, The Institute
for Bird Populations, P.O. Box 1346, Point Reyes Station, CA 94956-1346,
USA
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ABSTRACT: Population trend data from
the North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) have been used to identify
conservation priorities and justify major conservation initiatives.
Yet the BBS has been criticized for potential habitat bias and reliance
on abundance indices to estimate trends. We compared 1992-2003 BBS trend
estimates to trend estimates derived from bird-banding data collected
as part of the Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survivorship (MAPS)
program for 36 wood warbler species. Similarity in trends between the
2 monitoring programs at the survey-wide and program-wide scales suggested
that each program can provide accurate trend information. The MAPS program,
however, was designed primarily to complement (rather than duplicate)
count-based efforts, such as the BBS, by providing estimates or indices
of demographic rates. Demographic data from MAPS can be used to lend
insight into proximate (demographic) causes of population trends and
inform management. We illustrate this with analyses of 1992-2003 MAPS
data for yellow warbler (Dendroica petechia). We used reverse-time capture/recapture
models to evaluate importance of new recruits (including immigrating
adults and young from the previous year) relative to surviving adults
in explaining variation in trend among BBS physiographic strata. We
included the number of young per adult captured (an index of productivity)
as a covariate in models to assess effects of productivity on trends.
Survival was the key demographic driverof recent population trends.
Comparison of MAPS productivity indices and adult apparent survival
rate estimates to BBS trend estimates largely confirmed this inference.
We suggest that increased MAPS coverage, better coordination between
MAPS and the BBS, and continued development of analytical methods that
link the 2 programs will enhance the value of these monitoring efforts
to land managers and onservation planners working at a variety of spatial
scales. (JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT 72(8):1665–1673; 2008)
DOI: 10.2193/2008-129
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