Document Type
Article
Publication Title
The Condor
Publisher
Cooper Ornithological Society
Rights and Access Note
© 2010 The Cooper Ornithological Society
Publication Date
11-2010
First Page
834
Last Page
840
Issue Number
4
Volume Number
112
Abstract/ Summary
We calculated the home ranges and core areas of 13 adult Rusty Blackbirds (Euphagus carolinus) in Maine to determine (1) the area requirements of breeding adults, (2) whether area requirements of the sexes and of colonial and noncolonial individuals differ, and (3) the proportion of the home range and core area that would be protected by a buffer of no logging of 50–100 m around occupied wetlands. Mean home ranges (37.5 ± 12.6 ha) and core areas (11.1 ± 2.8 ha) were large in comparison to those of other breeding icterids, and adults often foraged in multiple unconnected wetlands. Rusty Blackbirds that were part of a loose colony had home ranges and core areas three times larger than those of pairs that nested solitarily, which we speculate may be due to adults following one other to feed on unpredictable emergences of aquatic insects. Home ranges and core areas included a surprisingly small amount of wetland habitat, only 12% and 19% respectively, but adults often foraged in small wet patches (<16 m2) in otherwise upland habitat. The 75-m buffers around wetlands that we recommended in a concurrent study may help protect the Rusty Blackbird's nesting habitat, but such buffers contained less than half the average home range, suggesting that they may be of only limited benefit as a conservation strategy for protecting foraging habitat.
Repository Citation
Powell, Luke L.; Hodgman, Thomas P.; and Glanz, William E., "Home Ranges of Rusty Blackbirds Breeding in Wetlands: How Much Would Buffers from Timber Harvest Protect Habitat?" (2010). Biology and Ecology Faculty Scholarship. 11.
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/bio_facpub/11
Publisher Statement
Luke L. Powell, Thomas P. Hodgman, William E. Glanz, Home Ranges of Rusty Blackbirds Breeding in Wetlands: How Much Would Buffers from Timber Harvest Protect Habitat?, The Condor, Volume 112, Issue 4, 1 November 2010, Pages 834–840, https://doi.org/10.1525/cond.2010.100151
DOI
10.1525/cond.2010.100151
Version
publisher's version of the published document