Information from Bird Nests Monitored on the Colville River Delta, Alaska, 2011-2018
December 16, 2020
This dataset contains nesting information for birds breeding at a site on the Colville River, Alaska, 2011-2018. Nests were located during area searches conducted by biologists, and standardized information on each nest was collected following protocols of the Arctic Shorebird Demographic Network (Brown et al. 2014).
Citation Information
Publication Year | 2020 |
---|---|
Title | Information from Bird Nests Monitored on the Colville River Delta, Alaska, 2011-2018 |
DOI | 10.5066/P9BJBRTO |
Authors | Daniel R Ruthrauff |
Product Type | Data Release |
Record Source | USGS Asset Identifier Service (AIS) |
USGS Organization | Alaska Science Center |
Rights | This work is marked with CC0 1.0 Universal |
Related
Life-history attributes of Arctic-breeding birds drive uneven responses to environmental variability across different phases of the reproductive cycle
Animals exhibit varied life-history traits that reflect adaptive responses to their environments. For Arctic-breeding birds, traits related to diet, egg nutrient allocation, clutch size, and chick growth are predicted to be under increasing selection pressure due to rapid climate change and increasing environmental variability across high-latitude regions. We compared four migratory birds (black b
Authors
Daniel R. Ruthrauff, Vijay P. Patil, Jerry W. Hupp, David H. Ward
Related
Life-history attributes of Arctic-breeding birds drive uneven responses to environmental variability across different phases of the reproductive cycle
Animals exhibit varied life-history traits that reflect adaptive responses to their environments. For Arctic-breeding birds, traits related to diet, egg nutrient allocation, clutch size, and chick growth are predicted to be under increasing selection pressure due to rapid climate change and increasing environmental variability across high-latitude regions. We compared four migratory birds (black b
Authors
Daniel R. Ruthrauff, Vijay P. Patil, Jerry W. Hupp, David H. Ward