TY - JOUR
T1 - Eastern Whip-poor-wills have larger nonbreeding home ranges in areas with more agriculture and forest fragmentation
AU - Skinner, Aaron A
AU - Matthews, Stephen N
AU - Ward, Michael P
AU - Souza-Cole, Ian
AU - Wright, James R
AU - Thompson, Frank R
AU - Benson, Thomas J
AU - Tonra, Christopher M
N1 - We are extremely grateful to all that assisted with field work and site access, including: Nick Anich, Sarah Kendrick, Bill Borovicka, Karen Menard, Kelly VanBeek, and Liz Ames. A special thanks to Tom Will (US Fish and Wildlife Service) for overall project support and Mike van den Tillaart (Lotek Wireless) for technical assistance with PinPoint GPS tags. We thank Christen Fleming for extensive assistance with home range and error modeling in the ctmm package. Thank you to 3 anonymous reviewers. We thank the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (USFWSF18AC00618), The Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center (Ohio State University SEEDS Grant), Association of Field Ornithologists, the University of Illinois Research Board grant, and the Illinois Department of Natural Resources (W-197-R) for funding.
PY - 2023/2/3
Y1 - 2023/2/3
N2 - Migratory bird populations can be limited by events in disparate parts of the world. Birds wintering in tropical regions are facing rapid habitat loss, climate change, and intensive agricultural regimes, potentially contributing to population declines. However, an understanding of basic nonbreeding ecology of species, such as habitat and space use, is critical for determining if this is the case. Populations of the nocturnal/crepuscular Eastern Whip-poor-will (Antrostomus vociferus) have declined by 70% since the 1960’s, yet data on the species are sparse outside of the breeding season. We extracted data from 41 archival GPS tags deployed on whip-poor-wills and estimated nonbreeding home ranges and land covers used. We used satellite imagery and stable carbon and nitrogen isotope values from claws grown during the nonbreeding season to analyze how land cover and habitat moisture impacted home range size and relative trophic level. Forest was by far the most prevalent land cover used by whip-poor-wills, occurring in all home ranges and accounting for >80% of diurnal roosting points. We found that less forest, the presence of agriculture, and more edge (irrespective of land cover) were associated with larger home ranges. Stable isotope values differed by broadscale ecoregion but not local land cover characteristics in our study, indicating that regional idiosyncrasies or broadscale processes can be more important in determining stable isotope ratios. Our findings suggest that the loss, fragmentation, and replacement of forest by agriculture in the core of the whip-poor-will’s nonbreeding range may represent a threat to the species, as they rely heavily upon forest, and appear to alter space use in response to changes in forest cover.
AB - Migratory bird populations can be limited by events in disparate parts of the world. Birds wintering in tropical regions are facing rapid habitat loss, climate change, and intensive agricultural regimes, potentially contributing to population declines. However, an understanding of basic nonbreeding ecology of species, such as habitat and space use, is critical for determining if this is the case. Populations of the nocturnal/crepuscular Eastern Whip-poor-will (Antrostomus vociferus) have declined by 70% since the 1960’s, yet data on the species are sparse outside of the breeding season. We extracted data from 41 archival GPS tags deployed on whip-poor-wills and estimated nonbreeding home ranges and land covers used. We used satellite imagery and stable carbon and nitrogen isotope values from claws grown during the nonbreeding season to analyze how land cover and habitat moisture impacted home range size and relative trophic level. Forest was by far the most prevalent land cover used by whip-poor-wills, occurring in all home ranges and accounting for >80% of diurnal roosting points. We found that less forest, the presence of agriculture, and more edge (irrespective of land cover) were associated with larger home ranges. Stable isotope values differed by broadscale ecoregion but not local land cover characteristics in our study, indicating that regional idiosyncrasies or broadscale processes can be more important in determining stable isotope ratios. Our findings suggest that the loss, fragmentation, and replacement of forest by agriculture in the core of the whip-poor-will’s nonbreeding range may represent a threat to the species, as they rely heavily upon forest, and appear to alter space use in response to changes in forest cover.
KW - Eastern Whip-poor-will
KW - agriculture
KW - forest
KW - fragmentation
KW - full annual cycle ecology
KW - home range
KW - landscape composition
KW - nightjar
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85193830452&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85193830452&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/ornithapp/duac050
DO - 10.1093/ornithapp/duac050
M3 - Article
SN - 0010-5422
VL - 125
JO - Ornithological Applications
JF - Ornithological Applications
IS - 1
M1 - duac050
ER -