Habitat associations of five forest owl species in the Manitoba Escarpment with special consideration to forest fragmentation and slope

This study describes an inferred use versus availability analysis for five forest owl species with respect to forest stand characteristics, fragmentation and slope. Locations for Great Horned Owls ('Bubo virginianus'), Great Gray Owls ('Strix nebulosa'), Barred Owls ('S. var...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hinam, Heather L.
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2478
id ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/2478
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spelling ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/2478 2023-06-18T03:43:14+02:00 Habitat associations of five forest owl species in the Manitoba Escarpment with special consideration to forest fragmentation and slope Hinam, Heather L. 2001-05-01T00:00:00Z 222510 bytes 184 bytes application/pdf text/plain http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2478 eng eng http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2478 open access master thesis 2001 ftunivmanitoba 2023-06-04T17:45:57Z This study describes an inferred use versus availability analysis for five forest owl species with respect to forest stand characteristics, fragmentation and slope. Locations for Great Horned Owls ('Bubo virginianus'), Great Gray Owls ('Strix nebulosa'), Barred Owls ('S. varia'), Boreal Owls ('Aegolius funereus') and Northern Saw-whet Owls ('A. acadicus') were obtained through nocturnal surveys conducted from mid-March to early June 1999 and 2000. Species' locations were computerized as the centre of home range plots and verlaid on digital forest resource inventory maps. Stand type, age, degree of fragmentation, amount of water edge, elevation and slope characteristics within plots were compared with similar data from stratified random sites to determine whether plots occupied by owls differed significantly. The five forest owl species in this study were not distributed randomly with respect to habitat type, degree of fragmentation and elevation and slope characteristics. (Abstract shortened by UMI.) Master Thesis Strix nebulosa MSpace at the University of Manitoba
institution Open Polar
collection MSpace at the University of Manitoba
op_collection_id ftunivmanitoba
language English
description This study describes an inferred use versus availability analysis for five forest owl species with respect to forest stand characteristics, fragmentation and slope. Locations for Great Horned Owls ('Bubo virginianus'), Great Gray Owls ('Strix nebulosa'), Barred Owls ('S. varia'), Boreal Owls ('Aegolius funereus') and Northern Saw-whet Owls ('A. acadicus') were obtained through nocturnal surveys conducted from mid-March to early June 1999 and 2000. Species' locations were computerized as the centre of home range plots and verlaid on digital forest resource inventory maps. Stand type, age, degree of fragmentation, amount of water edge, elevation and slope characteristics within plots were compared with similar data from stratified random sites to determine whether plots occupied by owls differed significantly. The five forest owl species in this study were not distributed randomly with respect to habitat type, degree of fragmentation and elevation and slope characteristics. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
format Master Thesis
author Hinam, Heather L.
spellingShingle Hinam, Heather L.
Habitat associations of five forest owl species in the Manitoba Escarpment with special consideration to forest fragmentation and slope
author_facet Hinam, Heather L.
author_sort Hinam, Heather L.
title Habitat associations of five forest owl species in the Manitoba Escarpment with special consideration to forest fragmentation and slope
title_short Habitat associations of five forest owl species in the Manitoba Escarpment with special consideration to forest fragmentation and slope
title_full Habitat associations of five forest owl species in the Manitoba Escarpment with special consideration to forest fragmentation and slope
title_fullStr Habitat associations of five forest owl species in the Manitoba Escarpment with special consideration to forest fragmentation and slope
title_full_unstemmed Habitat associations of five forest owl species in the Manitoba Escarpment with special consideration to forest fragmentation and slope
title_sort habitat associations of five forest owl species in the manitoba escarpment with special consideration to forest fragmentation and slope
publishDate 2001
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2478
genre Strix nebulosa
genre_facet Strix nebulosa
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2478
op_rights open access
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