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result(s) for
"Hudsonia montana"
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Modeling controlled burning and trampling reduction for conservation of Hudsonia montana
by
Frost, C.C
,
Lockwood, J.R. III
,
Gross, K. (Duke University, Durham, NC.)
in
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
,
Applied ecology
,
Biological and medical sciences
1998
Populations of mountain golden heather (Hudsonia montana), a threatened North Carolina shrub, are declining due to the suppression of natural fires and increased trampling by hikers and campers. Consequently, proposed management strategies have focused on conducting controlled burns and restricting human traffic. To help design an optimal management plan, we used demographic data from a 5-year field study of H. montana--which included a controlled burn--to construct size-based population projection matrices. Using these matrices, we projected the consequences of instituting controlled burns and hiking and camping restrictions separately and in tandem. We also determined the burn frequency that would maximize H. montana's population growth rate. Finally, we used a stochastic model to determine how environmental fluctuations could alter the efficacy of conservation measures. Our results suggest that, although neither burning nor trampling reduction alone can reverse H. montana's decline, a judicious combination of the two has an excellent chance of doing so. A burn frequency of once every 6-8 years should maximize H. montana's population growth, although the interburn interval could be increased to 12-16 years without significantly jeopardizing the success of the management plan. Our results show that, even with the limited data available, size-based projection matrix models can be useful tools for identifying promising combinations of multiple management strategies for most threatened plants.
Journal Article
Free Lunch, May Contain Lead
by
HILLER, BRIAN
,
McTEE, MICHAEL
,
RAMSEY, PHILIP
in
ammunition
,
Animal behavior
,
Athene cunicularia
2019
Scavengers are subsidized by the remains of hunting worldwide. Although most studies focus on carcasses of large mammals, small mammals that have been shot likely provide a significant food subsidy as well, particularly in parts of the western United States. Millions of small mammals are estimated to be shot each year for damage control and recreation, many being left in the field. Despite this prevalence of carrion, and the potential for scavengers to ingest residual lead from bullet fragments, the fate of these carcasses is largely unknown. We deployed remote cameras to observe which scavengers consumed shot ground squirrels (Urocitellus spp.) and black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus) in 8 locations across Montana, USA. At least 5 species of mammals and 9 species of birds scavenged, including burrowing owls (Athene cunicularia). Scavengers fully consumed 66% of carcasses and partially consumed 9%. Carcasses lasted an average of 24.5 hours before the first scavenger arrived. Of carcasses that were scavenged, mammals ate 16% and birds ate 84%, with corvids and raptors consuming an equal number of carcasses. Common ravens (Corvus corax) and black-billed magpies (Pica hudsonia) visited the most carcasses and often arrived first. Scavengers consumed only 9% of the carcasses that were partially concealed by being inside a burrow. Overall, our results indicate that a diverse scavenger community consumes shot ground squirrels and black-tailed prairie dogs, and consequently, may be exposed to lead from bullet fragments.
Journal Article
BLACK-BILLED MAGPIES (PICA HUDSONIA) CACHING FOOD IN SNOW
2020
I observed Black-billed Magpies (Pica hudsonia) in a residential backyard in Montana during November-December 2019 and February 2020, as they cached food 10 times in a snow cover 10- to 12-cm deep and recovered 3 caches from the snow. The magpies carried food items up to 7 m from a food source before caching them, and tended to cache more closely to the food source when alone rather than in the presence of other magpies. Most of the snow caches were on the ground, but 1 cache was made 1.5 m above ground in a snow-covered vine thicket, and a 2nd cache at the same height in snow accumulated on the roof of a parked trailer. Cached foods included chicken scratch (grains and cracked corn), sunflower seeds, crab apples, dried mealworms, and commercial suet. These observations appear to constitute the 1st report of Black-billed Magpies caching food in snow.
Journal Article