Linking snake habitat use to nest predation risk in grassland birds: the dangers of shrub cover

被引:0
|
作者
Page E. Klug
Sara L. Jackrel
Kimberly A. With
机构
[1] Kansas State University,Laboratory for Landscape and Conservation Ecology, Division of Biology
[2] The College of New Jersey,Department of Biology
来源
Oecologia | 2010年 / 162卷
关键词
Fire; Grazing; Nest success; Predator–prey relationships; Tallgrass prairie;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Extremes in rangeland management, varying from too-frequent fire and intensive grazing to the suppression of both, threaten rangeland ecosystems worldwide. Intensive fire and grazing denude and homogenize vegetation whereas their suppression increases woody cover. Although habitat loss is implicated in grassland bird declines, degradation through intensive management or neglect also decreases breeding habitat and may reduce nesting success through increased rates of nest predation. Snakes are important nest predators, but little is known about how habitat use in snakes relates to predation risk for grassland birds nesting within tallgrass prairie subjected to different grazing and fire frequencies. We evaluated nest survival in the context of habitat used by nesting songbirds and two bird-eating snakes, the eastern yellowbelly racer Coluber constrictor flaviventris and Great Plains ratsnake Pantherophis emoryi. Daily nest survival rates decreased with increasing shrub cover and decreasing vegetation height, which characterize grasslands that have been neglected or intensively managed, respectively. Discriminant function analysis revealed that snake habitats were characterized by higher shrub cover, whereas successful nests were more likely to occur in areas with tall grass and forbs but reduced shrub cover. Because snakes often use shrub habitat, birds nesting in areas with increased shrub cover may be at higher risk of nest predation by snakes in addition to other predators known to use shrub habitat (e.g., mid-sized carnivores and avian predators). Depredated nests also occurred outside the discriminant space of the snakes, indicating that other predators (e.g., ground squirrels Spermophilus spp. and bullsnakes Pituophis catenifer) may be important in areas with denuded cover. Targeted removal of shrubs may increase nest success by minimizing the activity of nest predators attracted to shrub cover.
引用
收藏
页码:803 / 813
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Different nest predator faunas and nest predation risk on ground and shrub nests at forest ecotones:: an experiment and a review
    Söderström, B
    Pärt, T
    Rydén, J
    OECOLOGIA, 1998, 117 (1-2) : 108 - 118
  • [32] Nest Predation Risk on Ground and Shrub Nests in Forest Margin Areas of Sulawesi, Indonesia
    Margaretha Z. Pangau-Adam
    Matthias Waltert
    Michael Mühlenberg
    Biodiversity & Conservation, 2006, 15 : 4143 - 4158
  • [33] Nest predation risk on ground and shrub nests in forest margin areas of Sulawesi, Indonesia
    Pangau-Adam, Margaretha Z.
    Waltert, Matthias
    Muehlenberg, Michael
    BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION, 2006, 15 (13) : 4143 - 4158
  • [34] Predation risk predicts use of a novel habitat
    Bishop, Melanie J.
    Byers, James E.
    OIKOS, 2015, 124 (09) : 1225 - 1231
  • [35] Parent birds assess nest predation risk: influence of cavity condition and avian nest predator activity
    Yoon, Jongmin
    Jung, Jung-Shim
    Joo, Eun-Jin
    Kim, Byung-Su
    Park, Shi-Ryong
    JOURNAL OF AVIAN BIOLOGY, 2017, 48 (05) : 691 - 699
  • [36] Can variation in risk of nest predation explain altitudinal migration in tropical birds?
    W. Alice Boyle
    Oecologia, 2008, 155 : 397 - 403
  • [37] Can variation in risk of nest predation explain altitudinal migration in tropical birds?
    Boyle, W. Alice
    OECOLOGIA, 2008, 155 (02) : 397 - 403
  • [38] Breeding Phenology of Birds: Mechanisms Underlying Seasonal Declines in the Risk of Nest Predation
    Borgmann, Kathi L.
    Conway, Courtney J.
    Morrison, Michael L.
    PLOS ONE, 2013, 8 (06):
  • [39] Ground nesting birds in roadside borders of the Argentine Pampas: habitat use and predation risk of artificial nests
    Daniela María Depalma
    Myriam Emilia Mermoz
    Revista Brasileira de Ornitologia, 2019, 27 (4): : 261 - 274
  • [40] Ground nesting birds in roadside borders of the Argentine Pampas: habitat use and predation risk of artificial nests
    Maria Depalma, Daniela
    Emilia Mermoz, Myriam
    REVISTA BRASILEIRA DE ORNITOLOGIA, 2019, 27 (04) : 261 - 274