Analysis of Raptor Pellets of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Reveals Multiple Producers of the Pellets across the Coastal Plain

By Madison Wells, Geology Advisor: Josh Miller Presentation ID: 305 Abstract: The Coastal Plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, AK is one of the last remaining, largely un-anthropogenically modified stretches of coastal plain in the United States. While state and federal resources focus on u...

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Main Authors: Wells, Madison, Miller, Josh
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Cincinnati Library Publishing Services 2021
Subjects:
Owl
Online Access:https://journals.uc.edu/index.php/Undergradshowcase/article/view/4578
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spelling ftunivcincinnati:oai:ojs.journals.uc.edu:article/4578 2023-05-15T14:48:22+02:00 Analysis of Raptor Pellets of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Reveals Multiple Producers of the Pellets across the Coastal Plain Wells, Madison Miller, Josh 2021-08-25 application/pdf https://journals.uc.edu/index.php/Undergradshowcase/article/view/4578 eng eng Cincinnati Library Publishing Services https://journals.uc.edu/index.php/Undergradshowcase/article/view/4578/3451 https://journals.uc.edu/index.php/Undergradshowcase/article/view/4578 Undergraduate Scholarly Showcase; Vol. 3 No. 1 (2021): 2021: Undergraduate Scholarly Showcase Proceedings Pellet Owl Raptor Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Coastal Plain info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2021 ftunivcincinnati 2022-08-31T11:32:09Z By Madison Wells, Geology Advisor: Josh Miller Presentation ID: 305 Abstract: The Coastal Plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, AK is one of the last remaining, largely un-anthropogenically modified stretches of coastal plain in the United States. While state and federal resources focus on understanding large mammals and migratory bird populations, we know less about small mammals which serve as the base of the food chain. Raptors generally eat their prey whole and will regurgitate packets of undigested material in the form of pellets. These pellets, particularly from owls, are useful for evaluating the composition of small mammal communities across space and through time. Recent work used pellets to establish the first survey of small mammals across the coastal plain. While snowy owls (Bubo scandiacus) were thought to be the source, no formal analysis has been done to evaluate the pellet producer(s). Identifying the pellet producer is key to fully understand the ecological data and biases associated with pellet records. I have measured 306 pellets for their length and width and compared that frequency distributions of those dimensions to known sizes of pellets from pellet producers that breed or summer along the Arctic Refuge Coastal Plain. Reference data was collected from literature and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Birds of the World website. The majority of Arctic Refuge pellets were shorter than those of snowy owl pellets and the distribution of pellet lengths and widths are inconsistent with a single producer. Pellets likely came from a mix of short-eared owls (Asio flammeus), snowy owls, and perhaps northern harriers (Circus hudsonius). Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Bubo scandiacus snowy owl Journals@UC (University of Cincinnati) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Journals@UC (University of Cincinnati)
op_collection_id ftunivcincinnati
language English
topic Pellet
Owl
Raptor
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
Coastal Plain
spellingShingle Pellet
Owl
Raptor
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
Coastal Plain
Wells, Madison
Miller, Josh
Analysis of Raptor Pellets of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Reveals Multiple Producers of the Pellets across the Coastal Plain
topic_facet Pellet
Owl
Raptor
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
Coastal Plain
description By Madison Wells, Geology Advisor: Josh Miller Presentation ID: 305 Abstract: The Coastal Plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, AK is one of the last remaining, largely un-anthropogenically modified stretches of coastal plain in the United States. While state and federal resources focus on understanding large mammals and migratory bird populations, we know less about small mammals which serve as the base of the food chain. Raptors generally eat their prey whole and will regurgitate packets of undigested material in the form of pellets. These pellets, particularly from owls, are useful for evaluating the composition of small mammal communities across space and through time. Recent work used pellets to establish the first survey of small mammals across the coastal plain. While snowy owls (Bubo scandiacus) were thought to be the source, no formal analysis has been done to evaluate the pellet producer(s). Identifying the pellet producer is key to fully understand the ecological data and biases associated with pellet records. I have measured 306 pellets for their length and width and compared that frequency distributions of those dimensions to known sizes of pellets from pellet producers that breed or summer along the Arctic Refuge Coastal Plain. Reference data was collected from literature and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Birds of the World website. The majority of Arctic Refuge pellets were shorter than those of snowy owl pellets and the distribution of pellet lengths and widths are inconsistent with a single producer. Pellets likely came from a mix of short-eared owls (Asio flammeus), snowy owls, and perhaps northern harriers (Circus hudsonius).
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Wells, Madison
Miller, Josh
author_facet Wells, Madison
Miller, Josh
author_sort Wells, Madison
title Analysis of Raptor Pellets of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Reveals Multiple Producers of the Pellets across the Coastal Plain
title_short Analysis of Raptor Pellets of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Reveals Multiple Producers of the Pellets across the Coastal Plain
title_full Analysis of Raptor Pellets of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Reveals Multiple Producers of the Pellets across the Coastal Plain
title_fullStr Analysis of Raptor Pellets of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Reveals Multiple Producers of the Pellets across the Coastal Plain
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of Raptor Pellets of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Reveals Multiple Producers of the Pellets across the Coastal Plain
title_sort analysis of raptor pellets of the arctic national wildlife refuge reveals multiple producers of the pellets across the coastal plain
publisher Cincinnati Library Publishing Services
publishDate 2021
url https://journals.uc.edu/index.php/Undergradshowcase/article/view/4578
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Bubo scandiacus
snowy owl
genre_facet Arctic
Bubo scandiacus
snowy owl
op_source Undergraduate Scholarly Showcase; Vol. 3 No. 1 (2021): 2021: Undergraduate Scholarly Showcase Proceedings
op_relation https://journals.uc.edu/index.php/Undergradshowcase/article/view/4578/3451
https://journals.uc.edu/index.php/Undergradshowcase/article/view/4578
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