Browsing by Subject "golden-cheeked warbler"
Now showing items 1-10 of 10
-
(2014-08-05)Understanding how habitat use and reproductive performance vary among age classes is important to understanding population structure and viability. Habitat conditions can affect occupancy and productivity of many songbirds, ...
-
(2011-08-08)Noise pollution can mask or distort bird songs, which inhibits mating success, predator detection, and parental response to begging calls. Road noise can cause lowered density and reproductive success in songbirds. I ...
-
(2013-04-24)Habitat fragmentation and isolation can result in decreased occupancy and reproductive success within songbirds, particularly for species inhabiting urban environments where suitable habitat may be limited. The golden-cheeked ...
-
(2012-07-16)The concept of habitat quality is fundamental to the study of ecology, and ecologists have long recognized the importance of vegetation structure and composition in the assessment of wildlife habitat. Vegetative characteristics ...
-
(2020-06-29)Many taxa exhibit geographic variation in acoustic signals, which can lead to reproductive isolation and divergence among populations. Geographic variation in the acoustic signals of wood warblers is well-documented, and ...
-
(Texas A&M University, 2005-02-17)Over the past 100150 years Texas rangelands have dramatically changed from native open savannahs to dense woodlands. On the Edwards plateau, a major management concern is the increasing encroachment of Ashe juniper ...
-
(2012-07-16)Oak wilt is a fatal disease of oaks caused by the fungus Ceratocystis fagacearum. Loss or degradation of habitat due to the disease may negatively affect the federally endangered golden-cheeked warbler (Setophaga chrysoparia). ...
-
(2014-08-08)Most avian habitat selection studies are conducted within small spatial and temporal scales and fail to link habitat selection decisions to reproductive success. This limits our understanding of avian demographic patterns ...
-
(2009-05-15)Preservation of large tracts of habitat is often recommended for long-term population viability of area-sensitive species. Large tracts may not always be available. Smaller patches, though not able to contain a viable ...
-
(2010-01-14)One major lesson derived from the implementation of the Endangered Species Act (ESA) over the past 30 years is that direct regulation is not the only nor the optimal way to protect endangered species on working lands because ...