Publications
USGS publications associated with the Bird Banding Laboratory. For a complete listing of USGS publications:
Filter Total Items: 163
A traditional and a less-invasive robust design: choices in optimizing effort allocation for seabird population studies A traditional and a less-invasive robust design: choices in optimizing effort allocation for seabird population studies
For many animal populations, one or more life stages are not accessible to sampling, and therefore an unobservable state is created. For colonially-breeding populations, this unobservable state could represent the subset of adult breeders that have foregone breeding in a given year. This situation applies to many seabird populations, notably albatrosses, where skipped breeders are either...
Authors
S. Converse, W. L. Kendall, P.F. Doherty, M.B. Naughton, J.E. Hines
Recovery distances of nestling Bald Eagles banded in Florida and implications for natal dispersal and philopatry Recovery distances of nestling Bald Eagles banded in Florida and implications for natal dispersal and philopatry
I used band recovery data to examine distances between banding and recovery locations for 154 nestling Florida Bald Eagles and discuss the implications for understanding natal dispersal and philopatry in this species. Band recoveries occurred in 23 U.S. states and five Canadian provinces between 1931–2005. Recovery distance from the natal nest averaged longer for the youngest age classes...
Authors
Petra Wood
Sampling design considerations for demographic studies: a case of colonial seabirds Sampling design considerations for demographic studies: a case of colonial seabirds
For the purposes of making many informed conservation decisions, the main goal for data collection is to assess population status and allow prediction of the consequences of candidate management actions. Reducing the bias and variance of estimates of population parameters reduces uncertainty in population status and projections, thereby reducing the overall uncertainty under which a...
Authors
William Kendall, Sarah Converse, Paul Doherty, Maura Naughton, Angela Anders, James E. Hines, Elizabeth Flint
Temporal patterns of apparent leg band retention in North American geese Temporal patterns of apparent leg band retention in North American geese
An important assumption of mark?recapture studies is that individuals retain their marks, which has not been assessed for goose reward bands. We estimated aluminum leg band retention probabilities and modeled how band retention varied with band type (standard vs. reward band), band age (1-40 months), and goose characteristics (species and size class) for Canada (Branta canadensis)...
Authors
Guthrie Zimmerman, William Kendall, Timothy Moser, Gary White, Paul Doherty
Breeding-season sympatry facilitates genetic exchange among allopatric wintering populations of Northern Pintails in Japan and California Breeding-season sympatry facilitates genetic exchange among allopatric wintering populations of Northern Pintails in Japan and California
The global redistribution of pathogens, such as highly pathogenic avian influenza, has renewed interest in the connectivity of continental populations of birds. Populations of the Northern Pintail (Anas acuta) wintering in Japan and California are considered separate from a management perspective. We used data from band recoveries and population genetics to assess the degree of...
Authors
Paul Flint, Kiyoaki Ozaki, John Pearce, Brian Guzzetti, Hiroyoshi Higuchi, Joseph Fleskes, Tetsuo Shimada, Dirk Derksen
Long-term pair bonds in the Laysan Duck Long-term pair bonds in the Laysan Duck
We describe long-term pair bonds in the endangered Laysan Duck (Anas laysanensis), a dabbling duck endemic to the Hawaiian Archipelago. Individually marked birds were identified on Laysan Island between 1998 and 2006 (n = 613 marked adults). We recorded pair bonds while observing marked birds, and documented within and between year mate switches and multi-year pair bonds. Twenty pairs...
Authors
M.H. Reynolds, J.H. Breeden, M.S. Vekasy, T.M. Ellis
Report of the Federal Advisory Committee on the Bird Banding Laboratory Report of the Federal Advisory Committee on the Bird Banding Laboratory
In the fall of 2005, the Directors of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) determined that to ensure that the Bird Banding Laboratory (BBL) of the USGS maintains and continues its important support of conservation and management of birds, it should be guided by a clear vision for the future. In order to carry out this task, they impaneled a...
Authors
Susan Haseltine, Paul Schmidt, Bradley Bales, David Bonter, David DeSante, Paul F. Doherty, Charles M. Francis, Paul Green, Lesley-Anne Howes, Daniel James, J. Lament, Richard Lancia, Ellen Paul, C. Ralph, John Rogers, Richard Young
A history of the Bird Banding Laboratory: 1920-2002 A history of the Bird Banding Laboratory: 1920-2002
No abstract available.
Authors
J. Tautin
North American Bird Banding and quantitative population ecology North American Bird Banding and quantitative population ecology
Early bird-banding programs in North America were developed to provide descriptions of bird migration and movement patterns. This initial interest in description quickly evolved into more quantitative interests in two ways. There was (1) interest in quantifying migration and movement patterns, and (2) rapid recognition that re-observations of marked birds provided information about other
Authors
J.D. Nichols, J. Tautin
Atlantic Flyway review: Region IV Piedmont-Coastal Plain, Fall 2007: Robbins Nest, Laurel, MD (390-0765) Atlantic Flyway review: Region IV Piedmont-Coastal Plain, Fall 2007: Robbins Nest, Laurel, MD (390-0765)
After a gap of two years I resumed banding at this suburban fall-line station on the Patuxent River, my 33rd fall banding season on our two-acre wooded lot. I banded three mornings per week, trying to keep the same schedule as the Patuxent powerline station five miles downstream. I used half as many nets as they did and captured only 15% as many birds. Their location in a large...
Authors
Chandler Robbins
History of 'computerization' of bird-banding records History of 'computerization' of bird-banding records
No abstract available.
Authors
C.S. Houston, M. Klimkiewicz, C.S. Robbins
Molt and aging criteria for four North American grassland passerines Molt and aging criteria for four North American grassland passerines
Prairie and grassland habitats in central and western North America have declined substantially since settlement by Europeans (Knopf 1994) and many of the birds and other organisms that inhabit North American grasslands have experienced steep declines (Peterjohn and Sauer 1999; Johnson and Igl 1997; Sauer, Hines, and Fallon 2007). The species addressed here, Sprague’s Pipit (Anthus...
Authors
Peter Pyle, Stephanie Jones, Janet Ruth