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Observer visitation frequency and success of mourning dove nests: A field experiment

January 1, 1984

Field studies of nesting success generally require visits by the investigator to the nests under study. Such visits may themselves influence nesting success, however, and this possibility has been discussed and investigated by a number of workers with a variety of bird species. Livezey (1980) reviewed the relevant literature for duck nests and noted that most studies failed to demonstrate differences in nesting success between visited nests and those not visited. Livezey (1980) found in his own work that nest abandonment may have occurred as a result of disturbance by observers but that nest predation was not related to time spent by observers at nests or number of observers approaching nests. Various components of nesting and breeding success in seabirds are thought to be adversely affected by human disturbance and nest visitation (Gillett et al. 1975, Robert and Ralph 1975, Ollason and Dunnet 1980). Upland, ground-nesting species have also been studied (e.g. Stoddard 1931, Evans and Wolfe 1967, Henry 1969, Roseberry and Klimstra 1970, Klimstra and Roseberry 1975), and, although conclusions have varied, a number of these workers found no effect of observers on nest-predation rates.

Publication Year 1984
Title Observer visitation frequency and success of mourning dove nests: A field experiment
Authors J. D. Nichols, H.F. Percival, R.A. Coon, M.J. Conroy, Gary L. Hensler, J. E. Hines
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title The Auk
Index ID 5221923
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Patuxent Wildlife Research Center