In our study, we examined the effect of crypticness and forest fragmentation on the depredation of artificial ground nests. This study examines the factors that might affect ground bird hatching success in the future. Two sets of artificial nests, white and cryptic, were placed in varying habitats--open, edge, interior--within different ecosystem types. Our first hypothesis was that white nests would be depredated more than cryptic nests. Secondly, we believed that nests in the open would be depredated more than those in the edge or interior. Our results showed that crypticness was found to have a significant effect by decreasing the depredation of those nests. We also found that depredation did not significantly vary between habitat ...
We investigated whether group-selection provides habitat of similar quality for early-successional s...
Anthropogenic changes in a landscape create new cues for birds, which must permanently adapt to thes...
Fragmentation of forested landscapes can reduce the reproductive success of birds occupying residual...
Although birds might increase nesting survival by selecting safe sites, nest predation is a major li...
Abstract only availableSince the 1990's scientists have become concerned about the declining populat...
Artificial nests are widely used in m4an field studies. However, it is unclear how well predation ra...
We estimated nesting success at real and artificial nests of grassland birds to test the influence o...
Nest abandonment prior to laying is poorly understood and rarely studied. One possible explanation i...
Abandoned structures are used by predatory species to perch, den, and pursue prey. In Wisconsin, pre...
Fragmentation of breeding habitat may cause declines in many bird populations. Our perception of the...
We reviewed published literature to examine the effect of habitat fragmentation on avian nesting suc...
Graduation date: 1985Rates of predation on artificial nests and nests of pen-reared\ud ring-necked p...
Nest predation exerts a major influence on the reproductive success of birds because it is the most ...
The exposed gravel of the braided rivers of the eastern South Island of New Zealand provide nesting ...
In human-modified environments, ecological traps may result from a preference for low-quality habita...
We investigated whether group-selection provides habitat of similar quality for early-successional s...
Anthropogenic changes in a landscape create new cues for birds, which must permanently adapt to thes...
Fragmentation of forested landscapes can reduce the reproductive success of birds occupying residual...
Although birds might increase nesting survival by selecting safe sites, nest predation is a major li...
Abstract only availableSince the 1990's scientists have become concerned about the declining populat...
Artificial nests are widely used in m4an field studies. However, it is unclear how well predation ra...
We estimated nesting success at real and artificial nests of grassland birds to test the influence o...
Nest abandonment prior to laying is poorly understood and rarely studied. One possible explanation i...
Abandoned structures are used by predatory species to perch, den, and pursue prey. In Wisconsin, pre...
Fragmentation of breeding habitat may cause declines in many bird populations. Our perception of the...
We reviewed published literature to examine the effect of habitat fragmentation on avian nesting suc...
Graduation date: 1985Rates of predation on artificial nests and nests of pen-reared\ud ring-necked p...
Nest predation exerts a major influence on the reproductive success of birds because it is the most ...
The exposed gravel of the braided rivers of the eastern South Island of New Zealand provide nesting ...
In human-modified environments, ecological traps may result from a preference for low-quality habita...
We investigated whether group-selection provides habitat of similar quality for early-successional s...
Anthropogenic changes in a landscape create new cues for birds, which must permanently adapt to thes...
Fragmentation of forested landscapes can reduce the reproductive success of birds occupying residual...