QUANTIFYING DISTURBANCE FACTORS AND EFFECTS IN COMMON TERNS (STERNA HIRUNDO) USING VISUAL, AUDIO, AND REPRODUCTIVE DATA

The common tern is designated as a species of special concern in Upstate New York. The largest inland tern colony in New York is located on Oneida Lake, which is habitat to many other colonial waterbird species and an area of high human use during the tern breeding season. In addition to disturbance...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mattison, Peter Moir
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1813/2944
Description
Summary:The common tern is designated as a species of special concern in Upstate New York. The largest inland tern colony in New York is located on Oneida Lake, which is habitat to many other colonial waterbird species and an area of high human use during the tern breeding season. In addition to disturbances caused by recreational use, Oneida Lake's common terns are exposed to potential disturbances from tern research and cormorant management. Researchers intensively monitor tern nests during the breeding season, and USDA-APHIS participates in a lake-wide hazing program to control double-crested cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus). The goal of this study was to discern and describe disturbances which might affect the projected sustainability of the common tern colony on Oneida Lake. To evaluate the status of common terns on Oneida Lake, reproductive and population data were gathered. In order to classify, quantify, and evaluate the extent of human disturbance to the tern colony, I observed the colony during the summer of 2003 and collected visual and audio data of potentially disturbing events and the terns' reactions. Analyses of these data were performed using conventional statistics and Raven spectrogram analysis software. Common tern population and reproductive parameters from 2003 were examined for deviation from patterns established by 1979-2002 data. Additionally, I examined differences in reproductive data among the different islands where terns nested in 2003. An estimated 449 pairs of terns established 621 nests in 2003. A total of 952 chicks hatched from 1587 eggs in 362 nests over the season, and 389 chicks fledged. These numbers are comparable or higher than those of past years and indicate that the Oneida Lake colony seems to be maintaining its population. Nests on Little Island were more likely to hatch than those on other islands. Further study is needed to determine why significant (at alpha=0.05) differences in nest fates among breeding islands occur I classified disturbances to the tern colony on ...