Abstract. Few attempts have been made to experimentally address the extent to which temporal or spatial variation in food availability influences avian habitat use. We used an experimental approach to investigate whether bird use differed between treated (arthropods reduced through insecticide application) and control (untreated) forest canopy gaps within a bottomland hardwood forest in the Upper Coastal Plain of South Carolina, USA. Gaps were two- to three-year-old group selection timber harvest openings of three sizes (0.13, 0.26, and 0.50 ha). Our study was conducted during four bird use periods (spring migration, breeding, post-breeding, and fall migration) in 2002 and 2003. Arthropods were reduced in treated gaps by 68% in 2002 and 73%...
Graduation date: 2004Arthropods are important food resources for birds. Forest management activities...
Some understory insectivorous birds manage to persist in tropical forest fragments despite signific...
Many species of mature forest-nesting birds (‘‘forest birds’’) undergo a pronounced shift in habitat...
Use of gap (created by tree falls) and non-gap forest understory sites by migrating birds in central...
The effects of harvest-created canopy gaps in bottomland hardwood forests on arthropod abundance and...
Arthropods, and insects in particular, constitute important food resources for several higher trophi...
1. Ecological trapping implies a preference for low-quality habitats over higher-quality options. Al...
We investigated whether group-selection provides habitat of similar quality for early-successional s...
Prolific oak regeneration occurred over past centuries from anthropogenic cutting, grazing, and fire...
Granivorous farmland passerines have declined in Europe as a result of agricultural intensification....
Graduation date: 2011Recent evidence suggests that population declines of some avian species may be ...
Many species of mature forest-nesting birds ("forest birds") undergo a pronounced shift in habitat u...
115 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2003.Most forest birds include her...
We studied breeding bird assemblages in forest gaps created in 1995 by Hurricane Opal at the Bent Cr...
<div><p>Many species of mature forest-nesting birds (“forest birds”) undergo a pronounced shift in h...
Graduation date: 2004Arthropods are important food resources for birds. Forest management activities...
Some understory insectivorous birds manage to persist in tropical forest fragments despite signific...
Many species of mature forest-nesting birds (‘‘forest birds’’) undergo a pronounced shift in habitat...
Use of gap (created by tree falls) and non-gap forest understory sites by migrating birds in central...
The effects of harvest-created canopy gaps in bottomland hardwood forests on arthropod abundance and...
Arthropods, and insects in particular, constitute important food resources for several higher trophi...
1. Ecological trapping implies a preference for low-quality habitats over higher-quality options. Al...
We investigated whether group-selection provides habitat of similar quality for early-successional s...
Prolific oak regeneration occurred over past centuries from anthropogenic cutting, grazing, and fire...
Granivorous farmland passerines have declined in Europe as a result of agricultural intensification....
Graduation date: 2011Recent evidence suggests that population declines of some avian species may be ...
Many species of mature forest-nesting birds ("forest birds") undergo a pronounced shift in habitat u...
115 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2003.Most forest birds include her...
We studied breeding bird assemblages in forest gaps created in 1995 by Hurricane Opal at the Bent Cr...
<div><p>Many species of mature forest-nesting birds (“forest birds”) undergo a pronounced shift in h...
Graduation date: 2004Arthropods are important food resources for birds. Forest management activities...
Some understory insectivorous birds manage to persist in tropical forest fragments despite signific...
Many species of mature forest-nesting birds (‘‘forest birds’’) undergo a pronounced shift in habitat...