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Abstract Habitat loss due to changes in land cover is one of the main causes of biodiversity decline worldwide. Habitat loss occurs disproportionately in areas of high biodiversity because these same areas are particularly suitable for development. We assessed the effect of development risk on the biodiversity of breeding birds in the United States. We compared the effect of two predictors of habitat loss on the richness, abundance, and rarity of woodland, open-habitat, and urban birds at the local and regional levels. We used the House Price Index—as a measure of development risk—and primary productivity as predictors in simulations of habitat loss. For local scale analysis, we used generalized regression models. For regional-scale habitat loss simulations, we statistically compared the results obtained from each predictor. Locally, development risk and primary productivity interacted in their effect on the richness, abundance, and rarity index of all birds. At the regional level, developmemore » « less
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European gulls Chroicocephalus ridibundus, Larus canus, and L. graellsii have dispersed to North America and C. ridibundus and L. graellsii have bred or attempted to breed. North American gulls L. delawarensis, Leucophaeus atricilla, Leucophaeus pipixcan, and Chroicocephalus philadelphia have dispersed to Europe, although no successful breeding by non-hybrid pairs has yet occurred. We hypothesized that as gull population sizes increase, the number of birds exploring potential new breeding sites also increases. To test our hypothesis, we compared the number of transatlantic vagrants to the population size on the previous year using generalized linear models. We found an increasing number of transatlantic vagrants moving in both directions, which suggests that vagrancy is not a random phenomenon driven by strong winds nor caused by reverse migration. Population size predicted transatlantic vagrancy in four of the seven species. However, our hypothesis that increases in population size drive increases in vagrancy was only supported in two of these instances. We further looked at sub-populations of L. delawarensis in North America and tested our hypothesis for each subpopulation. We found partial support for our hypothesis for these data. Even within one species, we observed multiple relationships between vagrancy and population size. Our results showed that size or trend in source population size—in some circumstances—is clearly a driver of vagrancy, but other factors must play an important role too. As anthropogenic development continues, and high-quality habitats become farther apart, it is important that we continue to investigate all drivers of vagrancy because the persistence of a species may depend crucially on its longest-distance dispersers.more » « less
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Tropical Kingbird at Staten Island, New York and a Northeastwards Surve of Vagrants to North AmericaTropical Kingbird (Tyrannus melancholicus) is an abundant and widespread Neotropical species with an extended history of vagrancy to temperate North America (Pranty et al. 2016). One at Mount Loretto Unique Area, Staten Island, NY (40.503575, -74.218169) on 26 September 2021 was just the second for New York State, less than a year after the first, at Dobbs Ferry, Westchester County, 27-29 October 2020 (Tom Warren, Julien Ansellem, eBird). These New York records follow scores of records from Florida since 1982 and at least 25 from northeastern North America through 2020. Here we provide details for the Staten Island record, describe the broader recent increase in northward occurrence of vagrant Tropical Kingbirds, and address what could be responsible for this change. Specifically, we tested the hypothesis that the occurrence of Tropical Kingbirds in northeastern North America could be predicted by their occurrence in Florida and confirmed that this was so, supporting the notion that vagrancy to northeastern North America is the result of an ongoing process of population growth, exploratory behavior, and colonization.more » « less
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Freile, J.; Kirwan, G. (Ed.)The paper describes the second occurrence of Amazon Kingfisher Chloroceryle amazona west of the Andes Mountains. This is significant because of the general belief that tropical birds are rather sedentary and unlikely to engage in long-distance dispersal. This occurrence suggests otherwise.more » « less
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Vagrancy is critical in facilitating range expansion and colonization through exploration and occupation of potentially suitable habitat. Uncovering origins of vagrants will help us better understand not only species-specific vagrant movements, but how the dynamics of a naturally growing population influence vagrancy, and potentially lead to range expansion. Under the premise that occurrence of vagrants is linked to increasing population growth in the core of the breeding range, we assessed the utility of breeding population survey data to predict source populations of vagrants. Lesser Black-backed Gulls (LBBG) ( Larus fuscus ) served as our focal species due to their dramatic and well-documented history of vagrancy to North America in the last 30 years. We related annual occurrence of vagrants to indices of breeding population size and growth rate of breeding populations. We propose that the fastest growing population is the most likely source of recent vagrants to North America. Our study shows that it is possible to predict potential source populations of vagrants with breeding population data, but breeding surveys require increased standardization across years to improve models. For the Lesser Black-backed Gull, Iceland’s breeding population likely influenced vagrancy during the early years of colonization, but the major increase in vagrants occurred during a period of growth of Greenland’s population, suggesting that Greenland is the source population of the most recent pulse of vagrant LBBG to North America.more » « less
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Abstract We studied positive associations among seabirds and marine mammals at South Georgia on research cruises during the Austral winters of 1985, 1991 and 1993 and found statistically significant differences. We collected data on abundance and distribution, providing a critical reference for sub-Antarctic conservation in anticipation of future environmental changes. We found significant changes in the abundance of 29% of species surveyed and a consequent change in species diversity. We postulate that the resulting altered community composition may have previously unanticipated population effects on the component species, due to changes in positive interactions among species which use each other as cues to the presence of prey. We found a near threefold reduction in spatial overlap among vertebrate predators, associated with warming sea temperatures. As the strength and opportunity for positive associations decreases in the future, feeding success may be negatively impacted. In this way, environmental changes may disproportionately impact predator abundances and such changes are likely already underway, as Southern Ocean temperatures have increased substantially since our surveys. Of course the changes we describe are not solely due to changing sea temperature or any other single cause—many factors are important and we do not claim to have removed these from consideration. Rather, we report previously undocumented changes in positive associations among species, and argue these changes may continue into the future, given near-certain continued increases in climate-related changes.more » « less
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