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Post-fledging survival in passerine birds and the value of post-fledging studies to conservation

Conservation efforts are most effective when we have complete demographic information for a species of concern. Nevertheless, fundamental gaps in our knowledge of demography still exist for many taxa. For passerine birds, the period of time directly after young birds leave the nest and before they d...

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Published in:The Journal of wildlife management 2014-02, Vol.78 (2), p.183-193
Main Authors: Cox, W. Andrew, Thompson III, Frank R., Cox, Allison S., Faaborg, John
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container_title The Journal of wildlife management
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creator Cox, W. Andrew
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Faaborg, John
description Conservation efforts are most effective when we have complete demographic information for a species of concern. Nevertheless, fundamental gaps in our knowledge of demography still exist for many taxa. For passerine birds, the period of time directly after young birds leave the nest and before they disperse and/or migrate (i.e., the post-fledging period) remains an understudied life stage. We reviewed the literature on survival of passerine birds during the post-fledging period to synthesize current knowledge on survival rates and the factors affecting these rates, and conducted a sensitivity analysis to explore the relationship between population growth and post-fledging survival across the range of rates reported in the literature. Fledgling age was a strong predictor of survival, with the highest mortality occurring during the first 3 weeks after birds fledged. Among species, survival ranged from 0.23 to 0.87 during the first 3 weeks post-fledging and increased with adult body mass and nestling period duration. The relatively high proportion (12 of 19; 63%) of studies that detected at least 1 habitat effect on survival indicates that management focused on post-fledging habitat can improve survival. Sensitivity analyses indicated that post-fledging survival rates less than approximately 0.4 require unrealistic overwinter survival rates of juveniles to prevent population decline, unless adult survival rates and seasonal fecundity are high. Post-fledging survival is a useful metric for monitoring passerine populations because it sets the ceiling on first-year survival, responds to habitat management, and leads to more comprehensive demographic models for songbirds. Published 2014. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/jwmg.670
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source Wiley; JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection
subjects Animal and plant ecology
Animal ecology
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Applied ecology
Aves
Aviculture
Biological and medical sciences
Bird nesting
Birds
Conservation biology
Conservation, protection and management of environment and wildlife
Demecology
Demography
Fecundity
Forest habitats
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
General aspects
General aspects. Techniques
Habitat conservation
Habitats
juvenile
Methods and techniques (sampling, tagging, trapping, modelling...)
passerines
Population decline
Population growth
population modeling
post-fledging
Review
Sensitivity analysis
songbird productivity
Songbirds
Survival
Survival rates
Vertebrates: general zoology, morphology, phylogeny, systematics, cytogenetics, geographical distribution
Wildlife
Wildlife conservation
Wildlife habitats
Wildlife management
title Post-fledging survival in passerine birds and the value of post-fledging studies to conservation
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