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Frogs Toads and Fire

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Flammulated Owl Distribution and Detections in Montana: ... 5 Northern Pygmy Owls. 4 Boreal Owls. 3 Western Screech Owls. 2 Great Grey Owls. 2 Long-eared Owls ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Frogs Toads and Fire


1
Flammulated Owl Distribution and Detections in
Montana Results from a region-wide survey
Amy Cilimburg Avian Science Center University of
Montana
2
Landbird Monitoring Program
  • Bird point counts -- 1994 - many partners
  • Long-term monitoring and habitat relationships
  • Management effects
  • Target species

3
FLAM BACKGROUND
  • Neotropical migrants
  • Arrive MT early to mid-May
  • Strictly nocturnal
  • Not captured via other monitoring efforts

4
FLAM BACKGROUND cont.
  • Feed primarily on Lepidoptera nocturnal moths
  • Habitat requirements
  • Large snags (Pileated WP or N. Flicker holes)
  • Open forests for foraging
  • Dense patches for roosting
  • Forest type
  • Ponderosa Pine / Douglas Fir
  • Open Doug fir mix

5
US Forest Service Region 1
6
2005 USFS - LBMP GOALS
  • Develop R1 protocol for Flammulated Owl surveys
  • Determine distribution especially east of the
    divide
  • Expand understanding of habitat associations
    especially west
  • Establish repeatable routes
  • Determine detection probability

7
Protocol and Planning
  • Protocol -- talked with owl experts and Forest
    Service biologists reviewed the literature.
  • Combined -- understanding of owl behavior
    logistical realities..
  • Nocturnal Broadcast Surveys
  • Transects along roads or trails
  • Spatial data via GPS
  • Standardized calling procedures
  • Where to survey???????

8
WHERE TO SURVEY???
  • Previously established surveys on some forests,
    none on others
  • GIS MODELING
  • Overall, cast a wide net in reasonable habitat
  • Forest-specific vegetation and road layers
  • Use age class (old growth or mature), size
    class, canopy cover
  • Stands within 500m of roads or trails

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Lolo National Forest
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STANDARDIZED DATA FORMS
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THE 2005 FIELD SEASON
  • Cold wet June
  • No night-time encounters with Mountain Lions,
    drunken locals
  • No one fell asleep and crashed while driving back
    to camp
  • There are owls out there!

19
Other Owls
  • 49 Great Horned Owls
  • 24 Barred Owls
  • 21 Northern Saw-whet Owl
  • 5 Northern Pygmy Owls
  • 4 Boreal Owls
  • 3 Western Screech Owls
  • 2 Great Grey Owls
  • 2 Long-eared Owls
  • 1 Short-eared Owl

20
Flam Owls detected Flams
NOT detected
Idaho
Montana
21
BY THE NUMBERS
  • Detected 243 FLAMS 9 of points
  • Set up and ran 265 transects (2721 pts)
  • Resampled on 5 forests 59 transects
  • Approximately 206 unique owls
  • On all but 3 forests Lewis Clark, Custer,
    Gallatin

22
More Numbers
  • Owls detected May 9-July 21
  • first and last day of surveying!
  • Detections only slightly lower after mid-June.
  • 65 of detections made after playing caller
    early season 50.
  • Extended call increased our detections.

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More Results
  • DETECTION
  • the probability of detecting an owl at a site in
    a single visit, when present.
  • Overall detection probability 0.72
  • OCCUPANCY
  • the fraction of sampling units in a landscape
    where a target species is present.
  • Overall Probability of Occurrence for R1 0.388
  • 10 higher than if no detection adjustment

25
Occupancy
FOREST transects with FLAMS Prob. Presence Std. Error
NEZ PERCE 16 0.747 0.115
LOLO 18 0.655 0.117
BITTERROOT 14 0.594 0.123
HELENA 11 0.512 0.120
BH-DL 5 0.359 0.139
FLATHEAD 1 0.132 0.126
CLEARWATER 2 0.120 0.081
IPNF 2 0.119 0.124
CUSTER 0 0 0
LEWIS CLARK 0 0 0
GALLATIN 0 0 0
26
Occupancy, cont.
  • HELPFUL PAPER
  • MacKenzie and Royle. 2005. Designing occupancy
    studies general advice and allocating survey
    effort. Journal of Applied Ecology 42
    1105-1114.
  • RARE SPECIES more efficient to survey more
    sampling units less intensively.
  • COMMON SPECIES - fewer sampling units should be
    surveyed more intensively.

27
Optimal of surveys to conduct at each
site.. Table 1 from MacKenzie and Royle 2005
p ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
p 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09
01 14 15 16 17 18 20 23 26 34
02  7  7  8  8  9 10 11 13 16
03  5  5  5  5  6  6  7  8 10
04  3  4  4  4  4  5  5  6  7
05  3  3  3  3  3  3  4  4  5
06  2  2  2  2  3  3  3  3  4
07  2  2  2  2  2  2  2  3  3
08  2  2  2  2  2  2  2  2  2
09  2  2  2  2  2  2  2  2  2
P Detection probability
? Prob. of occurrence
28
Occupancy, cont.
  • Journal of Wildlife Management 2005
  • Special Section in Issue 3 The value and
    utility of Presence-Absence Data in Wildlife
    Monitoring and Research
  • New Book
  • Occupancy Estimation and Modeling inferring
    Patterns and Dynamics of Species Occurrence.
    2006. MacKenzie et al.

29
Habitat Associations
  • 60 ponderosa pine / doug fir
  • 75 ponderosa anything
  • 25 primarily Douglas Fir with other associated
    species
  • However, need to look different scales, gis.
    More work here.

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  • A FLAM was calling from the ridge in the
    foreground in early July. 
  • Primarily Doug-fir, with large P pines, and a few
    large snags on ridge. 
  • Bertie Lord Creek watershed, Sula Ranger
    District, Bitterroot NF. 

33
  • Two Flammulated Owls called from within 50 meters
    of this location in mid-July.
  • Woods Creek watershed, West Fork Ranger District,
    Bitterroot NF

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Winter Wren
38
http//avianscience.dbs.umt.edu
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FUTURE????
43
THANKS
  • US Forest Service Skip Kowalski and Forest
    Biologists
  • The many intrepid nocturnal field technicians
  • Vita Wright
  • Jim Baldwin, USFS PSW statistician
  • ASC Staff Anna Noson (GIS)

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