Master of Science, University of Toledo, 2020, Biology (Ecology)
Many Neotropical migratory songbirds are experiencing significant population declines (Wilcove and Terborgh 1984, Robbins et al. 1989, Rosenberg et al. 2019), the majority of which remain critically under-studied, impeding informed, science-based conservation and management. To effectively implement conservation and management strategies, it is critical to understand population dynamics and demography, which are most informative when all stages of a species' life cycle are incorporated (Sillett and Holmes 2002, Anders and Marshall 2005, Streby and Andersen 2011, Peterson et al. 2016, Kramer et al. 2018). In migratory passerines, this means considering the full annual cycle, including periods that may be difficult to study (e.g., migration, the non-breeding season, and the post-fledging period; Sillett and Holmes 2002, Webster et al. 2002, Anders and Marshall 2005, Streby and Andersen 2011, Cox et al. 2014, Marra et al. 2015, Peterson et al. 2016, Kramer et al. 2018).
Knowledge of annual cycle ecology is especially limited for female songbirds, desert-dwelling songbirds, and other western USA Nearctic-Neotropical migrants (McKinnon and Love 2018, Bennett et al. 2019, Hedley 2019), which have experienced community wide declines in the past century (Iknayan and Beissinger 2018). The Gray Vireo (Vireo vicinior) is a small (~11-14 g), under-studied migratory songbird that breeds primarily in pinon (Pinus spp.)-juniper (Juniperus spp.) savannas and structurally similar arid landscapes in the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico (Barlow et al. 1999; but see Hargrove and Unitt 2017 for chaparral habitat associations of the likely-disjunct California population). Gray Vireos are currently listed as threatened in New Mexico (NMDGF 2018), as a species of Conservation Concern by US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS 2008), and as a Watch List Species by Partners in Flight (Rosenberg et al. 2016). These listings are likely due to a lack of demographical informatio (open full item for complete abstract)
Committee: Henry Streby (Committee Chair); Kathy Granillo (Committee Member); Brian Carpenter (Committee Member); Jeanine Refsnider-Streby (Committee Member); Eric Zeigler (Committee Member)
Subjects: Animals; Biology; Conservation; Demography; Ecology; Fine Arts; Gender; Gender Studies; Organismal Biology; Wildlife Conservation; Wildlife Management; Zoology