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Competitive Interactions and Resource Partitioning Between Northern Spotted Owls and Barred Owls in Western Oregon.

机译:俄勒冈州北部发现的猫头鹰和条纹猫头鹰之间的竞争性相互作用和资源分配。

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摘要

The federally threatened northern spotted owl (Strix occidentalis caurina) is the focus of intensive conservation efforts that have led to much forested land being reserved as habitat for the owl and associated wildlife species throughout the Pacific Northwest of the United States. Recently, however, a relatively new threat to spotted owls has emerged in the form of an invasive competitor: the congeneric barred owl (Strix varia). I investigated spatial relationships, habitat selection, diets, survival, and reproduction of sympatric spotted owls and barred owls in western Oregon, USA.;I used an information-theoretic approach to rank discrete choice models representing alternative hypotheses about the influence of forest conditions and interspecific interactions on species-specific patterns of nighttime habitat selection. Spotted owls spent a disproportionate amount of time foraging on steep slopes in ravines dominated by old (>120 yrs old) conifer trees. Barred owls used available forest types more evenly than spotted owls, and were most strongly associated with patches of large hardwood and conifer trees that occupied relatively flat areas along streams. Spotted and barred owls differed in the relative use of old conifer forest (higher for spotted owls) and slope conditions (steeper slopes for spotted owls). I found no evidence that the 2 species differed in their use of young, mature, and riparian-hardwood forest types, and both species avoided forest-nonforest edges. The best resource selection function for spotted owls indicated that the relative probability of a location being selected was reduced if the location was within or in close proximity to a core-use area of a barred owl.;I used pellet analysis and measures of food niche overlap to examine the potential for dietary competition between spatially associated pairs of spotted owls and barred owls. I identified 1,223 prey items from 15 territories occupied by pairs of spotted owls and 4,299 prey items from 24 territories occupied by pairs of barred owls. Diets of both species were dominated by nocturnal mammals, but diets of barred owls included many terrestrial, aquatic, and diurnal prey species that were rare or absent in diets of spotted owls. Northern flying squirrels (Glaucomys sabrinus), woodrats (Neotoma fuscipes, N. cinerea), and lagomorphs (Lepus americanus, Sylvilagus bachmani) were particularly important prey for both owl species, accounting for 81% and 49% of total dietary biomass for spotted owls and barred owls, respectively. Dietary overlap between pairs of spotted and barred owls in adjacent territories ranged from 28–70% (mean = 42%).;In addition to overlap in resource use, I also identified strong associations between the presence of barred owls and the behavior of spotted owls, as shown by changes in space-use, habitat selection, and reproductive output of spotted owls exposed to different levels of spatial overlap with barred owls in adjacent territories. Barred owls in my study area displayed both numeric and demographic superiority over spotted owls; the annual survival probability of radio-marked spotted owls from known-fate analyses (0.81, SE = 0.05) was lower than that of barred owls (0.92, SE = 0.04), and barred owls produced over 6 times as many young over a 3-year period as spotted owls. Survival of both species was positively associated with an increasing proportion of old (>120 yrs old) conifer forest within the home range, which suggested that availability of old forest was a potential limiting factor in the competitive relationship between the 2 species. When viewed collectively, my results support the hypothesis that interference competition with a high density of barred owls for territorial space can act to constrain the availability of critical resources required for successful recruitment and reproduction of spotted owls. My findings have broad implications for the conservation of spotted owls, as they suggest that spatial heterogeneity in survival and reproduction may arise not only because of differences among territories in the quality of forest habitat, but also because of the spatial distribution of an invasive competitor. (Abstract shortened by UMI.).
机译:受到联邦威胁的北部斑点猫头鹰(Strix occidentalis caurina)是密集保护工作的重点,这导致许多林地被保留为猫头鹰以及整个美国西北太平洋地区相关野生动植物的栖息地。但是,最近,以入侵性竞争者的形式出现了对斑点猫头鹰的相对较新的威胁:同系条纹猫头鹰(Strix varia)。我研究了美国俄勒冈州西部同胞斑点猫头鹰和条纹猫头鹰的空间关系,栖息地选择,饮食,生存和繁殖;我使用信息理论方法对离散选择模型进行排名,这些模型代表了关于森林状况和环境影响的替代假设。种间相互作用对夜间栖息地选择的物种特定模式的影响。在以老(> 120岁)针叶树为主的沟壑中,斑点猫头鹰在不规则的山坡上觅食的时间不成比例。条纹猫头鹰使用的森林类型比斑点猫头鹰更均匀,并且与大型硬木和针叶树的斑块紧密相关,这些大块硬木和针叶树沿河流占据相对平坦的区域。斑点猫头鹰和条纹猫头鹰在旧针叶林的相对使用(斑点猫头鹰的较高)和斜坡条件(斑点猫头鹰的陡峭斜坡)的相对使用方面有所不同。我没有发现任何证据表明这两种物种在使用年轻,成熟和河岸硬木森林类型方面存在差异,并且两种物种都避免使用非森林边缘。斑点猫头鹰的最佳资源选择功能表明,如果位置在条纹猫头鹰的核心使用区域内或附近,则选择该位置的相对概率会降低。重叠以检查斑点猫头鹰和条纹猫头鹰在空间上相关的配对之间的饮食竞争潜力。我确定了成对的猫头鹰在15个领土上的1,223个猎物和成对的猫头鹰在24个领土上的4,299个猎物。这两种物种的饮食都以夜间哺乳动物为主,但条纹猫头鹰的饮食中有许多陆栖,水生和昼夜猎物物种,这些物种在斑点猫头鹰的饮食中很少见或不存在。北方飞行松鼠(青松鼠),伍德拉特鼠(新孢子虫,灰质猪笼草)和象形文字(美洲Lepus,Sylvilagus bachmani)是这两种猫头鹰的特别重要的猎物,分别占斑点猫头鹰食物中总生物量的81%和49%和猫头鹰。相邻地区成对的斑点猫头鹰和条纹猫头鹰之间的饮食重叠范围为28-70%(平均= 42%)。;除了资源使用方面的重叠之外,我还发现条纹猫头鹰的存在与斑点行为之间的紧密联系如猫头鹰在空间使用,生境选择和生殖猫头鹰的繁殖上所显示的那样,这些猫头鹰在不同水平的空间重叠下与相邻地区的条纹猫头鹰重叠。我研究区域内的条纹猫头鹰比斑点猫头鹰在数字和人口统计方面均具有优势。已知命运分析中的放射性标记斑点猫头鹰的年生存概率(0.81,SE = 0.05)低于条纹猫头鹰(0.92,SE = 0.04),并且条纹猫头鹰的年幼率是3岁时的6倍年期间作为斑点猫头鹰。两种物种的生存与家园范围内旧的(> 120岁)针叶林的比例增加呈正相关,这表明旧森林的可利用性是影响这两个物种之间竞争关系的潜在限制因素。从总体上看,我的结果支持以下假设:高密度条纹猫头鹰争夺领土空间的干扰竞争可能会限制成功募集和繁殖斑点猫头鹰所需的关键资源的可用性。我的发现对斑点猫头鹰的保护具有广泛的意义,因为它们表明生存和繁殖的空间异质性不仅可能是由于森林生境质量在各个地区之间存在差异,而且还可能是由于入侵性竞争者的空间分布所致。 (摘要由UMI缩短。)。

著录项

  • 作者

    Wiens, J. David.;

  • 作者单位

    Oregon State University.;

  • 授予单位 Oregon State University.;
  • 学科 Biology Ecology.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2012
  • 页码 157 p.
  • 总页数 157
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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