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Title: Seasonal relationships between birds and arthropods in bottomland forest canopy gaps.

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OSTI ID:836686

Bowen, Liessa, Thomas. 2004. Seasonal relationships between birds and arthropods in bottomland forest canopy gaps. PhD Dissertation. North Carolina State University. Raleigh, North Carolina. 98pp. I investigated the influence of arthropod availability and vegetation structure on avian habitat use at the center, edge, and adjacent to forest canopy gaps in 2001 and 2002. I used mist-netting and plot counts to estimate abundance of birds using three sizes (0.13, 0.26, and 0.5 ha) of 7-8 year old group-selection timber harvest openings during four seasons (spring migration, breeding, post-breeding, and fall migration) in a bottomland hardwood forest in the Upper Coastal Plain of South Carolina. I used foliage clipping, Malaise trapping, and pitfall trapping to determine arthropod abundance within each habitat, and I used a warm water crop-flush on captured birds to gather information about arthropods eaten. I observed more birds, including forest interior species, forest-edge spedge species, and several individual species, in early-successional canopy gap and gap-edge habitats than in surrounding mature forest during all seasons. I found a significant interaction between season and habitat type for several groups and individual species, suggesting a seasonal shift in habitat use. Captures of all birds, insectivorous birds, foliage- gleaners, ground-gleaners, aerial salliers, Hooded Warbler (Wilsonia citrina), Northern Cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis), White-eyed Vireo (Vireo griseus), and Black-throated Blue Warbler (Dendroica caerulescens) were positively correlated with understory vegetation density during two or more seasons. I found relationships between insectivorous birds and leaf-dwelling Lepidoptera, insectivorous birds and ground-dwelling arthropods, foliage-gleaning birds and foliage-dwelling arthropods, and aerial salliers and flying arthropods, as well as between individual bird species and arthropods. Relationships were inconsistent, however, with many species being negatively correlated with arthropod abundance. Coleopteran, Lepidopteran, and Aranid prey items represented the greatest proportions of crop-flush samples during all seasons. Proportional consumption of Coleopteran and Hemipteran prey items was higher than their proportional availability, and consumption of Aranid and Hymenopteran prey items was lower than their proportional availability during all seasons. Individual bird species and guilds consistently consumed similar proportions of certain groups of arthropods from spring through fall migration, with no apparent seasonal shift in diet composition. My research suggests that many species of birds selectively choose mid-successional gap and gap-edge habitat over surrounding mature forest during the non-breeding season, and the creation of small canopy gaps within a mature forest may increase local bird species richness. It is less obvious how arthropod availability affects bird habitat use across seasons. A structurally diverse mosaic of habitat types, including regenerating canopy gaps within a mature forest, may provide valuable habitat for birds and a variety of arthropod prey items across multiple seasons.

Research Organization:
USDA Forest Service, Savannah River, New Ellenton, SC (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Environmental Management (EM)
DOE Contract Number:
AI09-00SR22188
OSTI ID:
836686
Report Number(s):
na; 04-21-D
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

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