期刊论文详细信息
Avian Conservation and Ecology
Diurnal habitat selection of migrating Whooping Crane in the Great Plains
Greg D. Wright,2  Patrick D Farrell,3  David M Baasch,3  Mary J. Harner,4  Kristine L. Metzger,4  Andrew J Caven,4  David A. Brandt,6  Aaron T Pearse,6 
[1] United States Forest Service;University of Nebraska at Kearney;Executive Director's Office for the Platte River Recovery Implementation Program;The Crane Trust;U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service;U.S. Geological Survey Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center
关键词: diurnal;    Grus americana;    habitat management;    habitat selection;    Whooping Crane;   
DOI  :  10.5751/ACE-01317-140106
学科分类:社会科学、人文和艺术(综合)
来源: Resilience Alliance Publications
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【 摘 要 】

Available stopover habitats with quality foraging opportunities are essential for migrating waterbirds, including Whooping Crane (Grus americana). Several studies have evaluated habitats used by Whooping Crane for roosting throughout its migration corridor; however, habitats associated with foraging and other diurnal activities have received less attention. We used data collected from 42 Whooping Crane individuals that included 2169 diurnal use locations within 395 stopover sites evaluated during spring 2013 to fall 2015 to assess diurnal habitat selection throughout the U.S. portion of the migration corridor. We found that Whooping Crane selected wetland land-cover types (i.e., open water, riverine, and semipermanent wetlands) and lowland grasslands for diurnal activities over all other land-cover types that we evaluated, including croplands. Whooping Crane generally avoided roads, and avoidance varied based on land-cover class. There has been considerable alteration and destruction of natural wetlands and rivers that serve as roosting and foraging sites for migrating Whooping Crane. Given recent droughts and the likelihood of future landscape changes within the migration corridor, directing conservation efforts toward protecting and enhancing wetland stopover areas may prove critical for continued growth of the last remaining wild population of Whooping Crane. Future studies of this Whooping Crane population should focus on specific wetland complexes and riverine sites throughout the migration corridor to identify precise management actions that could be taken to enhance and protect these imperilled land-cover types.

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