Abundance and Habitat Use of Winter Raptors on a Reclaimed Surface Mine in Southeastern Ohio

Author Institution: Department of Biology, Muskingum University Numerous studies have documented the benefits of reclaimed surface mines to breeding grassland birds, but few studies have focused on the use of such grasslands by winter raptors. I surveyed birds of prey along a driving transect on and...

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Main Author: Ingold, Danny J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1811/52794
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spelling ftohiostateu:oai:kb.osu.edu:1811/52794 2023-05-15T15:55:35+02:00 Abundance and Habitat Use of Winter Raptors on a Reclaimed Surface Mine in Southeastern Ohio Ingold, Danny J. 2010-09 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1811/52794 en_US eng The Ohio Journal of Science, v110, n4 (September, 2010), 70-76. 0030-0950 http://hdl.handle.net/1811/52794 Reproduction of articles for non-commercial educational or research use granted without request if credit to The Ohio State University and The Ohio Academy of Science is given. Article 2010 ftohiostateu 2020-08-22T19:16:07Z Author Institution: Department of Biology, Muskingum University Numerous studies have documented the benefits of reclaimed surface mines to breeding grassland birds, but few studies have focused on the use of such grasslands by winter raptors. I surveyed birds of prey along a driving transect on and around a 3,700 ha reclaimed surface mine in east-central Ohio from early January through mid-April 2009. My objective was to use these survey data to assess the relative abundance of migratory and winter resident raptors, as well as to examine potential habitat associations, perching preferences and morning versus afternoon activity patterns in each species. I sighted 382 total birds; red-tailed (Buteo jamaicensis) and rough-legged hawks (B. lagopus) had the greatest index of relative abundance followed by American kestrels (Falco sparverius) and northern harriers (Circus cyaneus). Numbers of rough-legged hawks, the only purely migratory species in this region, declined from January through April, while numbers of red-tailed hawks and harriers increased. Rough-legged hawks, kestrels and harriers were found in open grasslands at a rate greater than expected by chance alone, whereas red-tailed hawks were found disproportionately more often along forest edges. Most rough-legged hawks and harriers were observed soaring rather than perched, while approximately equal numbers of red-tailed hawks were observed soaring or perched in large trees. Most kestrels were observed on utility wires or in small trees. That moderate to high numbers of obligate grassland raptors were observed in this study, support previous findings that reclaimed surface mines provide important winter habitat for these species. Article in Journal/Newspaper Circus cyaneus Ohio State University (OSU): Knowledge Bank
institution Open Polar
collection Ohio State University (OSU): Knowledge Bank
op_collection_id ftohiostateu
language English
description Author Institution: Department of Biology, Muskingum University Numerous studies have documented the benefits of reclaimed surface mines to breeding grassland birds, but few studies have focused on the use of such grasslands by winter raptors. I surveyed birds of prey along a driving transect on and around a 3,700 ha reclaimed surface mine in east-central Ohio from early January through mid-April 2009. My objective was to use these survey data to assess the relative abundance of migratory and winter resident raptors, as well as to examine potential habitat associations, perching preferences and morning versus afternoon activity patterns in each species. I sighted 382 total birds; red-tailed (Buteo jamaicensis) and rough-legged hawks (B. lagopus) had the greatest index of relative abundance followed by American kestrels (Falco sparverius) and northern harriers (Circus cyaneus). Numbers of rough-legged hawks, the only purely migratory species in this region, declined from January through April, while numbers of red-tailed hawks and harriers increased. Rough-legged hawks, kestrels and harriers were found in open grasslands at a rate greater than expected by chance alone, whereas red-tailed hawks were found disproportionately more often along forest edges. Most rough-legged hawks and harriers were observed soaring rather than perched, while approximately equal numbers of red-tailed hawks were observed soaring or perched in large trees. Most kestrels were observed on utility wires or in small trees. That moderate to high numbers of obligate grassland raptors were observed in this study, support previous findings that reclaimed surface mines provide important winter habitat for these species.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Ingold, Danny J.
spellingShingle Ingold, Danny J.
Abundance and Habitat Use of Winter Raptors on a Reclaimed Surface Mine in Southeastern Ohio
author_facet Ingold, Danny J.
author_sort Ingold, Danny J.
title Abundance and Habitat Use of Winter Raptors on a Reclaimed Surface Mine in Southeastern Ohio
title_short Abundance and Habitat Use of Winter Raptors on a Reclaimed Surface Mine in Southeastern Ohio
title_full Abundance and Habitat Use of Winter Raptors on a Reclaimed Surface Mine in Southeastern Ohio
title_fullStr Abundance and Habitat Use of Winter Raptors on a Reclaimed Surface Mine in Southeastern Ohio
title_full_unstemmed Abundance and Habitat Use of Winter Raptors on a Reclaimed Surface Mine in Southeastern Ohio
title_sort abundance and habitat use of winter raptors on a reclaimed surface mine in southeastern ohio
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1811/52794
genre Circus cyaneus
genre_facet Circus cyaneus
op_relation The Ohio Journal of Science, v110, n4 (September, 2010), 70-76.
0030-0950
http://hdl.handle.net/1811/52794
op_rights Reproduction of articles for non-commercial educational or research use granted without request if credit to The Ohio State University and The Ohio Academy of Science is given.
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