Shorebirds represent a highly diverse group of species, many of which experience tremendous energy demands associated with long-distance migratory flights. Transcontinental migrants are dependent upon dynamic freshwater wetlands for stopover resources essential for replenishment of lipid reserves and completion of migration. Patterns of shorebird migration across midcontinental wetlands were detected from migration reports to American Birds and information provided by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service national wildlife refuges. Patterns in species composition and abundance varied geographically, emphasizing the uniqueness of different regions to migrating shorebirds. Smaller species and neotropical migrants moved primarily across the Great Pla...
To examine how habitat use by sandpipers (Calidris spp.; Baird’s sandpipers, dunlin, least sandpiper...
The shorebirds, Order Charadriiformes, are very important organisms as they make up a great proporti...
The Rainwater Basin is arguably Nebraska\u27s most productive area for observing migrant shorebirds,...
Shorebirds represent a highly diverse group of species, many of which experience tremendous energy d...
Stopover use by migrating shorebirds is affected by patch-level characteristics of habitat, but the ...
The Rainwater Basin (RWB) has received limited attention as an important stopover area for migrant s...
Shorebirds have always relied on the extensive network of natural wetlands from Texas to North Dakot...
Staging areas along the coasts provide reliable food resources and shorebirds may use the same stopo...
Habitat loss and alteration from land use change, species invasion, and more recently, climate chang...
Dependent as they are on rare and remote open habitats for breeding and survival, shorebirds connect...
The loss of wetlands and shifting public interest towards the conservation of biological diversity a...
Many species of shorebirds (Charadrii) are long-distance migrants that rely on disturbance-free stop...
In 1974, Manomet Observatory in Massachusetts organized the International Shorebird Survey (ISS) to ...
Many shorebirds (Order: Charadriiformes; Family: Charadriidae, Recurvirostridae, Scolopacidae, Haema...
Coastal pastures are common agroecosystems adjacent to estuarine areas that can provide valuable hab...
To examine how habitat use by sandpipers (Calidris spp.; Baird’s sandpipers, dunlin, least sandpiper...
The shorebirds, Order Charadriiformes, are very important organisms as they make up a great proporti...
The Rainwater Basin is arguably Nebraska\u27s most productive area for observing migrant shorebirds,...
Shorebirds represent a highly diverse group of species, many of which experience tremendous energy d...
Stopover use by migrating shorebirds is affected by patch-level characteristics of habitat, but the ...
The Rainwater Basin (RWB) has received limited attention as an important stopover area for migrant s...
Shorebirds have always relied on the extensive network of natural wetlands from Texas to North Dakot...
Staging areas along the coasts provide reliable food resources and shorebirds may use the same stopo...
Habitat loss and alteration from land use change, species invasion, and more recently, climate chang...
Dependent as they are on rare and remote open habitats for breeding and survival, shorebirds connect...
The loss of wetlands and shifting public interest towards the conservation of biological diversity a...
Many species of shorebirds (Charadrii) are long-distance migrants that rely on disturbance-free stop...
In 1974, Manomet Observatory in Massachusetts organized the International Shorebird Survey (ISS) to ...
Many shorebirds (Order: Charadriiformes; Family: Charadriidae, Recurvirostridae, Scolopacidae, Haema...
Coastal pastures are common agroecosystems adjacent to estuarine areas that can provide valuable hab...
To examine how habitat use by sandpipers (Calidris spp.; Baird’s sandpipers, dunlin, least sandpiper...
The shorebirds, Order Charadriiformes, are very important organisms as they make up a great proporti...
The Rainwater Basin is arguably Nebraska\u27s most productive area for observing migrant shorebirds,...