Jamaica Bay Studies VIII: An Overview of Abiotic Factors Affecting Several Avian Groups

The distribution and abundance of several avian groups were studied at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge (New York) from 31 May 1978 to 31 May 1979. The refuge contains a tidal bay and two impoundments. Avian groups considered were grebes (Podicepe auritus and Podilymbus podiceps), cormorants (Phalacrocor...

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Main Author: Burger, Joanna
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Journal of Coastal Research 1988
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.flvc.org/jcr/article/view/77726
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spelling ftfloridaojojs:oai:journals.flvc.org:article/77726 2023-05-15T15:48:57+02:00 Jamaica Bay Studies VIII: An Overview of Abiotic Factors Affecting Several Avian Groups Burger, Joanna 1988-05-01 application/pdf https://journals.flvc.org/jcr/article/view/77726 eng eng Journal of Coastal Research https://journals.flvc.org/jcr/article/view/77726/75178 https://journals.flvc.org/jcr/article/view/77726 Journal of Coastal Research; Vol 4 No 2 (1988): Journal of Coastal Research 0749-0208 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 1988 ftfloridaojojs 2020-11-14T19:09:55Z The distribution and abundance of several avian groups were studied at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge (New York) from 31 May 1978 to 31 May 1979. The refuge contains a tidal bay and two impoundments. Avian groups considered were grebes (Podicepe auritus and Podilymbus podiceps), cormorants (Phalacrocorax spp.), egrets and an ibis (Egretta spp. Plegadis falcinellus), geese (Branta auritus), ducks (tribes: Cairinini, Anatini, Aythyini, Mergini, Oxyurini), shorebirds (suborders: Charadrii, Scolopaci), gulls (Larus spp.), terns (Sterna spp.) and skimmers (Rynchops niger). During the entire sample period ducks account for 35% of the birds, followed by gulls, shorebirds and geese. Geese and gulls primarily used the tidal bay, while the other species concentrated on the freshwater ponds. For all birds considered together, date, tide height, tidetime, and temperature contributed significantly to explaining the variability in the number of birds. Considering each group separately, between 16% (gulls) and 66% (terns) of the variability in numbers was explained by multiple regression models. In general date, tide, wind and temperature were the most important variables for the individual models. Seasonal patterns of use reflected breeding schedules and constraints on migration patterns. Egrets, ibises, terns, and skimmers were present during the breeding season. Other species groups used Jamaica Bay either as an overwintering or migration stop-over area. Only gulls were present throughout the year in abundance. Temperature and wind affected the local distribution as birds concentrated on the bay at very low temperatures (when the ponds were frozen) and on the ponds during high winds. Tidal factors affected every major avian group, although some individual species were not affected e.g., Canada goose). Most avian groups fed on tidal mudflats or shallow water areas in the bay during low tide (ducks, shorebirds, gulls) although grebes fed there during high tides and terns fed there during rising and high tides. Article in Journal/Newspaper Canada Goose Florida Online Journals (FloridaOJ) Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Florida Online Journals (FloridaOJ)
op_collection_id ftfloridaojojs
language English
description The distribution and abundance of several avian groups were studied at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge (New York) from 31 May 1978 to 31 May 1979. The refuge contains a tidal bay and two impoundments. Avian groups considered were grebes (Podicepe auritus and Podilymbus podiceps), cormorants (Phalacrocorax spp.), egrets and an ibis (Egretta spp. Plegadis falcinellus), geese (Branta auritus), ducks (tribes: Cairinini, Anatini, Aythyini, Mergini, Oxyurini), shorebirds (suborders: Charadrii, Scolopaci), gulls (Larus spp.), terns (Sterna spp.) and skimmers (Rynchops niger). During the entire sample period ducks account for 35% of the birds, followed by gulls, shorebirds and geese. Geese and gulls primarily used the tidal bay, while the other species concentrated on the freshwater ponds. For all birds considered together, date, tide height, tidetime, and temperature contributed significantly to explaining the variability in the number of birds. Considering each group separately, between 16% (gulls) and 66% (terns) of the variability in numbers was explained by multiple regression models. In general date, tide, wind and temperature were the most important variables for the individual models. Seasonal patterns of use reflected breeding schedules and constraints on migration patterns. Egrets, ibises, terns, and skimmers were present during the breeding season. Other species groups used Jamaica Bay either as an overwintering or migration stop-over area. Only gulls were present throughout the year in abundance. Temperature and wind affected the local distribution as birds concentrated on the bay at very low temperatures (when the ponds were frozen) and on the ponds during high winds. Tidal factors affected every major avian group, although some individual species were not affected e.g., Canada goose). Most avian groups fed on tidal mudflats or shallow water areas in the bay during low tide (ducks, shorebirds, gulls) although grebes fed there during high tides and terns fed there during rising and high tides.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Burger, Joanna
spellingShingle Burger, Joanna
Jamaica Bay Studies VIII: An Overview of Abiotic Factors Affecting Several Avian Groups
author_facet Burger, Joanna
author_sort Burger, Joanna
title Jamaica Bay Studies VIII: An Overview of Abiotic Factors Affecting Several Avian Groups
title_short Jamaica Bay Studies VIII: An Overview of Abiotic Factors Affecting Several Avian Groups
title_full Jamaica Bay Studies VIII: An Overview of Abiotic Factors Affecting Several Avian Groups
title_fullStr Jamaica Bay Studies VIII: An Overview of Abiotic Factors Affecting Several Avian Groups
title_full_unstemmed Jamaica Bay Studies VIII: An Overview of Abiotic Factors Affecting Several Avian Groups
title_sort jamaica bay studies viii: an overview of abiotic factors affecting several avian groups
publisher Journal of Coastal Research
publishDate 1988
url https://journals.flvc.org/jcr/article/view/77726
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Canada Goose
genre_facet Canada Goose
op_source Journal of Coastal Research; Vol 4 No 2 (1988): Journal of Coastal Research
0749-0208
op_relation https://journals.flvc.org/jcr/article/view/77726/75178
https://journals.flvc.org/jcr/article/view/77726
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