Publications
USGS publications associated with the Bird Banding Laboratory. For a complete listing of USGS publications:
Filter Total Items: 163
Atlantic Flyway review: Region IV, Piedmont-Coastal Plain, Fall 2004: Robbins Nest, Laurel, MD (390-0765) Atlantic Flyway review: Region IV, Piedmont-Coastal Plain, Fall 2004: Robbins Nest, Laurel, MD (390-0765)
The continuing decline in migratory species is depressing. For a 'migration station' to report Northern Cardinal as the species most commonly banded during the autumn months came as a real shock, especially when the cardinal was so far ahead of second-place catbird. I caught twice as many cardinals as all sparrows combined (including juncos), and the total for cardinals came within ten...
Authors
Chandler Robbins
Assessment of bird populations in a high quality savanna/woodland: a banding approach Assessment of bird populations in a high quality savanna/woodland: a banding approach
Between 1999 and 2004, Save the Dunes Conservation Fund's Miller Woods Bird Banding Program monitored migrating and breeding bird populations within a high quality black oak, dry-mesic sand savanna/woodland with ridge and swale topography. The objectives of this program were to collect consistent and reliable demographic and abundance data on the bird populations, to investigate long...
Authors
Sandra Wilmore, Gary A. Glowacki, Ralph Grundel
Individual quality, survival variation and patterns of phenotypic selection on body condition and timing of nesting in birds Individual quality, survival variation and patterns of phenotypic selection on body condition and timing of nesting in birds
Questions about individual variation in “quality” and fitness are of great interest to evolutionary and population ecologists. Such variation can be investigated using either a random effects approach or an approach that relies on identifying observable traits that are themselves correlated with fitness components. We used the latter approach with data from 1,925 individual females of...
Authors
Peter Blums, James Nichols, James Hines, Mark S. Lindberg, Aivars Mednis
Atlantic Flyway review: Region IV, Piedmont-Coastal Plain, Fall 2004 Atlantic Flyway review: Region IV, Piedmont-Coastal Plain, Fall 2004
July, August, and September were cool and wet in the Southeast, with multiple hurricanes threatening the banding stations. Banding results ranged from poor in Laurel and Chincoteague to excellent at Chino Farms, Kiptopeke, Jekyll Island, and the Florida stations. There was little agreement on peak migration days, which ranged from 11 Oct to 6 Nov. Likewise, the date for maximum species...
Authors
Chandler Robbins
Abundance and distribution of the common eider in eastern North America during the molting season Abundance and distribution of the common eider in eastern North America during the molting season
Like most other sea ducks, male common eiders (Somateria mollissima) concentrate in large groups to molt following the breeding season. Although Maine conducted surveys in the 1980s, little was known of eider molting sites in Atlantic Canada until recently, when surveys and research conducted in Quebec, Newfoundland, Labrador, Nova Scotia and Maine revealed a number of important molting...
Authors
Jean-Pierre Savard, B. Allen, D. McAuley, G.R. Milton, S. Gililand
Geographic variation in survival and migratory tendency among North American Common Mergansers Geographic variation in survival and migratory tendency among North American Common Mergansers
Movement ecology and demographic parameters for the Common Merganser (Mergus merganser americanus) in North America are poorly known. We used band-recovery data from five locations across North America spanning the years 1938–1998 to examine migratory patterns and estimate survival rates. We examined competing time-invariant, age-graduated models with program MARK to study sources of...
Authors
John Pearce, John Reed, Paul Flint
Phylogeography of the American woodcock (Scolopax minor): Are management units based on band recovery data reflected in genetically based management units? Phylogeography of the American woodcock (Scolopax minor): Are management units based on band recovery data reflected in genetically based management units?
Information on population connectivity throughout the annual cycle has become more crucial, because populations of many migratory birds are in decline. One such species is the American Woodcock (Scolopax minor), which inhabits early-successional forests in eastern North America. Although band recoveries have proved useful for dividing populations of this game bird species into an Eastern...
Authors
J.M. Rhymer, D.G. McAuley, H.L. Ziel
Redistribution and growth of the Caspian Tern population in the Pacific Coast region of North America, 1981-2000 Redistribution and growth of the Caspian Tern population in the Pacific Coast region of North America, 1981-2000
We examined nesting distribution and demography of the Pacific Coast population of Caspian Terns (Sterna caspia) using breeding records and band recoveries spanning two decades since the first population assessment. Since 1980, population size has more than doubled to about 12 900 pairs, yet the proportion of the population nesting at inland (18%) versus coastal sites (82%) has remained...
Authors
R.M. Suryan, D. Craig, D.D. Roby, N.D. Chelgren, K. Collis, W.D. Shuford, Donald E. Lyons
A general model for the analysis of mark-resight, mark-recapture, and band-recovery data under tag loss A general model for the analysis of mark-resight, mark-recapture, and band-recovery data under tag loss
Estimates of waterfowl demographic parameters often come from resighting studies where birds fit with individually identifiable neck collars are resighted at a distance. Concerns have been raised about the effects of collar loss on parameter estimates, and the reliability of extrapolating from collared individuals to the population. Models previously proposed to account for collar loss...
Authors
Paul Conn, William Kendall, Michael Samuel
Migration stopover ecology of western avian populations: A southwestern migration workshop Migration stopover ecology of western avian populations: A southwestern migration workshop
The importance of migration stopover sites in ensuring that migratory birds successfully accomplish their journeys between breeding and non-breeding ranges has come to the forefront of avian research. Migratory birds that breed in western United States (US) and Canada and overwinter primarily in western Mexico migrate across the arid region of northern Mexico and southwestern US. Many of...
Authors
Susan Skagen, Cynthia Melcher, Rob Hazelwood
Long-term effects of flipper bands on penguins Long-term effects of flipper bands on penguins
Changes in seabird populations, and particularly of penguins, offer a unique opportunity for investigating the impact of fisheries and climatic variations on marine resources. Such investigations often require large-scale banding to identify individual birds, but the significance of the data relies on the assumption that no bias is introduced in this type of long-term monitoring. After 5...
Authors
M. Gauthier-Clerc, J.-P. Gendner, C. A. Ribic, William R. Fraser, Eric Woehler, S. Descamps, C. Gilly, Bohec Le, Maho Le
Differential spring migration by male and female Western Sandpipers at interior and coastal stopover sites Differential spring migration by male and female Western Sandpipers at interior and coastal stopover sites
Western Sandpipers Calidris mauri are differential migrants on their non-breeding areas, with females wintering farther south. Earlier passage of males in the spring has been explained by sexual differences in winter latitude (male-biased sex ratios at more northerly areas) and onset of migration (males departing earlier). We investigated sex differences during spring migration by...
Authors
Mary Bishop, Nils Warnock, John Takekawa