Waterfowl distribution and abundance during spring migration in southern Oregon and northeastern California

We used aerial surveys to study abundance and distribution of waterfowl (ducks, geese, swans, and coots) during spring in southern Oregon and northeastern California (SONEC). Total waterfowl-use days in SONEC during the 119-day, 5 January–3 May, spring period was similar during 2002 (127,977,700) an...

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Main Authors: Fleskes, Joseph P., Yee, Julie L.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/wnan/vol67/iss3/10
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/wnan/article/2015/viewcontent/26089.pdf
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spelling ftbrighamyoung:oai:scholarsarchive.byu.edu:wnan-2015 2023-07-23T04:13:23+02:00 Waterfowl distribution and abundance during spring migration in southern Oregon and northeastern California Fleskes, Joseph P. Yee, Julie L. 2007-09-25T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/wnan/vol67/iss3/10 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/wnan/article/2015/viewcontent/26089.pdf unknown BYU ScholarsArchive https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/wnan/vol67/iss3/10 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/wnan/article/2015/viewcontent/26089.pdf Western North American Naturalist text 2007 ftbrighamyoung 2023-07-03T22:33:23Z We used aerial surveys to study abundance and distribution of waterfowl (ducks, geese, swans, and coots) during spring in southern Oregon and northeastern California (SONEC). Total waterfowl-use days in SONEC during the 119-day, 5 January–3 May, spring period was similar during 2002 (127,977,700) and 2003 (128,076,200) and averaged 1,075,900 birds per day (bpd); these estimates should be adjusted upward 4%–10% to account for areas not surveyed. Waterfowl abundance peaked in mid-March in both years: 2,095,700 in 2002 and 1,681,700 in 2003. Northern Pintail (Anas acuta) was the most abundant species in both years, accounting for 25.6% of the 2002 and 24.5% of the 2003 waterfowl-use days. Pintail abundance peaked during the 13 March survey at 689,300 in 2002 and 532,100 in 2003. All other dabbling ducks accounted for 27.6% and 28.6%, diving ducks for 13.5% and 9.2%, geese for 24.6% and 29.3%, swans for 2.8% and 1.9%, and coots for 5.8% and 6.4% of the spring waterfowl-use days in SONEC during 2002 and 2003, respectively. Although use days changed little for total waterfowl (+0.08%) and dabbling ducks (−0.1%), diving duck use was lower (−32%), and goose use days were greater (+19%) in 2003 than in 2002. Distribution was similar in both years, with the most waterfowl use in the Lower (66%) and Upper (14%) Klamath subregions; 2%–6% occurred in each of the other subregions. Although the Lower Klamath subregion received the greatest overall waterfowl use, distribution among subregions varied among species and surveys, and all subregions were important during some part of the spring for 1 or more species. Peak spring abundance in SONEC during 2002 and 2003 averaged 50.3% of the midwinter abundance in California (all survey regions) and southern Oregon (69-3 survey region) for all waterfowl, 46.1% for dabbling ducks, 62.4% for diving ducks, 68.8% for geese, 109.4% for swans, and 43.8% for coots. Each spring, 75% of all waterfowl use in SONEC occurred on federal, state, or Nature Conservancy lands (i.e., protected areas). ... Text Anas acuta Brigham Young University (BYU): ScholarsArchive Midwinter ENVELOPE(139.931,139.931,-66.690,-66.690)
institution Open Polar
collection Brigham Young University (BYU): ScholarsArchive
op_collection_id ftbrighamyoung
language unknown
description We used aerial surveys to study abundance and distribution of waterfowl (ducks, geese, swans, and coots) during spring in southern Oregon and northeastern California (SONEC). Total waterfowl-use days in SONEC during the 119-day, 5 January–3 May, spring period was similar during 2002 (127,977,700) and 2003 (128,076,200) and averaged 1,075,900 birds per day (bpd); these estimates should be adjusted upward 4%–10% to account for areas not surveyed. Waterfowl abundance peaked in mid-March in both years: 2,095,700 in 2002 and 1,681,700 in 2003. Northern Pintail (Anas acuta) was the most abundant species in both years, accounting for 25.6% of the 2002 and 24.5% of the 2003 waterfowl-use days. Pintail abundance peaked during the 13 March survey at 689,300 in 2002 and 532,100 in 2003. All other dabbling ducks accounted for 27.6% and 28.6%, diving ducks for 13.5% and 9.2%, geese for 24.6% and 29.3%, swans for 2.8% and 1.9%, and coots for 5.8% and 6.4% of the spring waterfowl-use days in SONEC during 2002 and 2003, respectively. Although use days changed little for total waterfowl (+0.08%) and dabbling ducks (−0.1%), diving duck use was lower (−32%), and goose use days were greater (+19%) in 2003 than in 2002. Distribution was similar in both years, with the most waterfowl use in the Lower (66%) and Upper (14%) Klamath subregions; 2%–6% occurred in each of the other subregions. Although the Lower Klamath subregion received the greatest overall waterfowl use, distribution among subregions varied among species and surveys, and all subregions were important during some part of the spring for 1 or more species. Peak spring abundance in SONEC during 2002 and 2003 averaged 50.3% of the midwinter abundance in California (all survey regions) and southern Oregon (69-3 survey region) for all waterfowl, 46.1% for dabbling ducks, 62.4% for diving ducks, 68.8% for geese, 109.4% for swans, and 43.8% for coots. Each spring, 75% of all waterfowl use in SONEC occurred on federal, state, or Nature Conservancy lands (i.e., protected areas). ...
format Text
author Fleskes, Joseph P.
Yee, Julie L.
spellingShingle Fleskes, Joseph P.
Yee, Julie L.
Waterfowl distribution and abundance during spring migration in southern Oregon and northeastern California
author_facet Fleskes, Joseph P.
Yee, Julie L.
author_sort Fleskes, Joseph P.
title Waterfowl distribution and abundance during spring migration in southern Oregon and northeastern California
title_short Waterfowl distribution and abundance during spring migration in southern Oregon and northeastern California
title_full Waterfowl distribution and abundance during spring migration in southern Oregon and northeastern California
title_fullStr Waterfowl distribution and abundance during spring migration in southern Oregon and northeastern California
title_full_unstemmed Waterfowl distribution and abundance during spring migration in southern Oregon and northeastern California
title_sort waterfowl distribution and abundance during spring migration in southern oregon and northeastern california
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2007
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/wnan/vol67/iss3/10
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/wnan/article/2015/viewcontent/26089.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(139.931,139.931,-66.690,-66.690)
geographic Midwinter
geographic_facet Midwinter
genre Anas acuta
genre_facet Anas acuta
op_source Western North American Naturalist
op_relation https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/wnan/vol67/iss3/10
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/wnan/article/2015/viewcontent/26089.pdf
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