Landscape-Level Planning for Conservation of Wetland Birds in the U.S. Prairie Pothole Region

Author(s):  
Neal D. Niemuth ◽  
Ronald E. Reynolds ◽  
Diane A. Granfors ◽  
Rex R. Johnson ◽  
Brian Wangler ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jody Daniel ◽  
Rebecca C Rooney

AbstractThe relative role of biological and abiotic filters on the assembly of co-occurring taxa is widely debated. While some authors point to biological interactions (e.g., competition) as the stronger driver of ecological selection, others assert that abiotic conditions are more important because they filter species at the regional level. Because communities influenced by a dominant abiotic filter, (e.g., Prairie Pothole Region (PPR) wetlands, each varying in ponded water permanence), often have strong cross-taxon relationships, we can study these communities to better understand the relative influence of abiotic vs biotic filters on community structure. Using functional dispersion as our measure of communities, we test six alternate hypotheses about the relative importance of various pathways representing influence of biological and permanence filters on birds, aquatic macroinvertebrates and wetland plants in the northwest PPR using structural equation modeling. We aimed to understand whether: 1) ponded water permanence alone explained functional dispersion; 2) the influence of permanence on functional dispersion was direct or mediated; and 3) abiotic filtering by permanence was stronger than biotic filtering by co-occurring taxa. The best model suggests that there is a direct influence of permanence on the functional dispersion of each taxonomic group and that both bird and macroinvertebrate functional dispersion are causally related to plant functional dispersion, though for invertebrates the influence of plants is much less than that of permanence. Thus, the relative importance of wetland permanence and the functional dispersion of co-occurring taxa depends on which taxon is considered in PPR wetlands.


Biometrics ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 270-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Andrew Royle ◽  
Mark D. Koneff ◽  
Ron E. Reynolds

2013 ◽  
pp. n/a-n/a ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin E. Doherty ◽  
Adam J. Ryba ◽  
Casey L. Stemler ◽  
Neal D. Niemuth ◽  
William A. Meeks

2001 ◽  
Vol 65 (4) ◽  
pp. 765 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald E. Reynolds ◽  
Terry L. Shaffer ◽  
Randy W. Renner ◽  
Wesley E. Newton ◽  
Bruce D. J. Batt

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jody Daniel ◽  
Heather Polan ◽  
Rebecca C Rooney

AbstractWetland losses in the Northern Prairie Pothole Region (NPPR) are largely attributed to agriculture. Since land-use is known to influence bird habitat selection, bird community composition is likely sensitive to the extent of neighboring agricultural activity. We determined which local and landscape habitat variables are most predictive of wetland bird assemblage occurrence in southern Alberta. We:1) identified distinct bird assemblages with a cluster analysis, 2) identified which species were indicative of these assemblages using an indicator species analysis and 3) predicted which bird assemblage would occur in a wetland with a classification and regression tree. Avian assemblages were more loosely defined and had few indicator species. Importantly, assemblages were specific to the natural region in which the wetland occurred. Also, landscapes with higher agricultural activity generally supported waterfowl and shorebirds, likely because agricultural activities excluded wetland-dependent birds that nest in upland habitat. Though waterfowl and shorebirds show poor sensitivity to surrounding landscape composition, edge-nesting wetland avifauna may make good indicators of ecological integrity.


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