Development of Methods for Bioacoustic Monitoring of Leach's and Fork-tailed Storm-petrels at Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge: 2007-2009 Report

Storm-petrels are small, nocturnal seabirds that spend their entire life on the ocean, except when nesting on offshore islands. In northern California, breeding populations of Leach???s Storm-petrels (Oceanodroma leucorhoa) and Fork-tailed Storm-petrels (Oceanodroma furcata) have not been monitored...

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Main Authors: Golightly, Richard T., Schneider, Stephanie R.
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2148/939
id ftcalifstateuniv:oai:dspace.calstate.edu:2148/939
record_format openpolar
spelling ftcalifstateuniv:oai:dspace.calstate.edu:2148/939 2023-05-15T17:52:20+02:00 Development of Methods for Bioacoustic Monitoring of Leach's and Fork-tailed Storm-petrels at Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge: 2007-2009 Report Golightly, Richard T. Schneider, Stephanie R. 2012-05-04 http://hdl.handle.net/2148/939 en_US eng http://hdl.handle.net/2148/939 Leach's storm-petrel Fork-tailed storm-petrel Oceanodroma leucorhoa Oceanodroma furcata Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge Northern California Breeding populations Audio recording Bioacoustic monitoring Technical Report 2012 ftcalifstateuniv 2022-04-13T11:09:27Z Storm-petrels are small, nocturnal seabirds that spend their entire life on the ocean, except when nesting on offshore islands. In northern California, breeding populations of Leach???s Storm-petrels (Oceanodroma leucorhoa) and Fork-tailed Storm-petrels (Oceanodroma furcata) have not been monitored since the last state-wide breeding survey of seabird colonies in 1989. The objective of this study was to investigate the efficacy of a novel technique, bioacoustic monitoring, to confirm the presence of Leach???s and Fork-tailed Storm-petrels at their breeding colonies. Also, a standardized sampling regime was developed to monitor population trends for Leach???s Storm-petrels using vocalization rates. This research was conducted at the largest seabird breeding colony in northern California, Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge. During 134.5 hours where audio recordings were reviewed from 2007-2009, a total of 12,654 Leach???s Storm-petrel vocalizations and 10 Fork-tailed Storm-petrel vocalizations were detected. For Leach???s Storm-petrels, calling peaked between the hours of 02:00 and 03:00 and the rate of vocalization was consistently high during the month of May and, as a result, this time was selected as the most appropriate time for recording Leach???s Storm-petrels vocalizations to monitor long-term and large-scale population trends. Traditional techniques to monitor storm-petrels are infrequent and often lack precision. However, if population trends are not assessed at regular intervals, corrective conservation and management is not possible. Unless techniques are developed to monitor storm-petrels more frequently and precisely, catastrophic declines could go unnoticed for decades. For storm-petrels, bioacoustic techniques can provide frequent information regarding species presence and relative changes in abundance. California Department of Fish and Game Agreement # S0780017; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Agreement # 815908J025 Report Oceanodroma leucorhoa Castle Rock California State University (CSU): DSpace Castle Rock ENVELOPE(-130.208,-130.208,57.840,57.840)
institution Open Polar
collection California State University (CSU): DSpace
op_collection_id ftcalifstateuniv
language English
topic Leach's storm-petrel
Fork-tailed storm-petrel
Oceanodroma leucorhoa
Oceanodroma furcata
Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge
Northern California
Breeding populations
Audio recording
Bioacoustic monitoring
spellingShingle Leach's storm-petrel
Fork-tailed storm-petrel
Oceanodroma leucorhoa
Oceanodroma furcata
Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge
Northern California
Breeding populations
Audio recording
Bioacoustic monitoring
Golightly, Richard T.
Schneider, Stephanie R.
Development of Methods for Bioacoustic Monitoring of Leach's and Fork-tailed Storm-petrels at Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge: 2007-2009 Report
topic_facet Leach's storm-petrel
Fork-tailed storm-petrel
Oceanodroma leucorhoa
Oceanodroma furcata
Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge
Northern California
Breeding populations
Audio recording
Bioacoustic monitoring
description Storm-petrels are small, nocturnal seabirds that spend their entire life on the ocean, except when nesting on offshore islands. In northern California, breeding populations of Leach???s Storm-petrels (Oceanodroma leucorhoa) and Fork-tailed Storm-petrels (Oceanodroma furcata) have not been monitored since the last state-wide breeding survey of seabird colonies in 1989. The objective of this study was to investigate the efficacy of a novel technique, bioacoustic monitoring, to confirm the presence of Leach???s and Fork-tailed Storm-petrels at their breeding colonies. Also, a standardized sampling regime was developed to monitor population trends for Leach???s Storm-petrels using vocalization rates. This research was conducted at the largest seabird breeding colony in northern California, Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge. During 134.5 hours where audio recordings were reviewed from 2007-2009, a total of 12,654 Leach???s Storm-petrel vocalizations and 10 Fork-tailed Storm-petrel vocalizations were detected. For Leach???s Storm-petrels, calling peaked between the hours of 02:00 and 03:00 and the rate of vocalization was consistently high during the month of May and, as a result, this time was selected as the most appropriate time for recording Leach???s Storm-petrels vocalizations to monitor long-term and large-scale population trends. Traditional techniques to monitor storm-petrels are infrequent and often lack precision. However, if population trends are not assessed at regular intervals, corrective conservation and management is not possible. Unless techniques are developed to monitor storm-petrels more frequently and precisely, catastrophic declines could go unnoticed for decades. For storm-petrels, bioacoustic techniques can provide frequent information regarding species presence and relative changes in abundance. California Department of Fish and Game Agreement # S0780017; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Agreement # 815908J025
format Report
author Golightly, Richard T.
Schneider, Stephanie R.
author_facet Golightly, Richard T.
Schneider, Stephanie R.
author_sort Golightly, Richard T.
title Development of Methods for Bioacoustic Monitoring of Leach's and Fork-tailed Storm-petrels at Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge: 2007-2009 Report
title_short Development of Methods for Bioacoustic Monitoring of Leach's and Fork-tailed Storm-petrels at Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge: 2007-2009 Report
title_full Development of Methods for Bioacoustic Monitoring of Leach's and Fork-tailed Storm-petrels at Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge: 2007-2009 Report
title_fullStr Development of Methods for Bioacoustic Monitoring of Leach's and Fork-tailed Storm-petrels at Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge: 2007-2009 Report
title_full_unstemmed Development of Methods for Bioacoustic Monitoring of Leach's and Fork-tailed Storm-petrels at Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge: 2007-2009 Report
title_sort development of methods for bioacoustic monitoring of leach's and fork-tailed storm-petrels at castle rock national wildlife refuge: 2007-2009 report
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2148/939
long_lat ENVELOPE(-130.208,-130.208,57.840,57.840)
geographic Castle Rock
geographic_facet Castle Rock
genre Oceanodroma leucorhoa
Castle Rock
genre_facet Oceanodroma leucorhoa
Castle Rock
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2148/939
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