Use of genetic techniques to address biases in northern goshawk turnover metrics

The Northern Goshawk is listed as a management indicator species for the Minidoka Ranger District of the Sawtooth National Forest. This distinction has enhanced research interest on goshawk population health in the region. For raptors, annual adult turnover is considered a crucial metric of populati...

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Main Author: Muench, Carly F
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ScholarWorks at University of Montana 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umt.edu/umcur/2018/327/10
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/umcur/article/2009/type/native/viewcontent/_Turnover.pptx
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spelling ftunivmontana:oai:scholarworks.umt.edu:umcur-2009 2023-07-16T04:00:08+02:00 Use of genetic techniques to address biases in northern goshawk turnover metrics Muench, Carly F 2018-04-27T20:40:00Z application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.presentationml.presentation https://scholarworks.umt.edu/umcur/2018/327/10 https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/umcur/article/2009/type/native/viewcontent/_Turnover.pptx unknown ScholarWorks at University of Montana https://scholarworks.umt.edu/umcur/2018/327/10 https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/umcur/article/2009/type/native/viewcontent/_Turnover.pptx University of Montana Conference on Undergraduate Research (UMCUR) text 2018 ftunivmontana 2023-06-27T23:39:56Z The Northern Goshawk is listed as a management indicator species for the Minidoka Ranger District of the Sawtooth National Forest. This distinction has enhanced research interest on goshawk population health in the region. For raptors, annual adult turnover is considered a crucial metric of population health; providing insights into mortality, fidelity, and population disturbances. Over the past 25 years of studying goshawks, the Intermountain Bird Observatory (IBO) has observed abnormally high female turnover as compared to other places the species has been studied. Their estimations are based on banding and resighting birds, and may be biased high due to undetected marked birds and unknown age of birds when banded. To increase accuracy of IBO’s turnover data, we conducted parentage analyses using blood samples collected from goshawks in 2012-2016. We analyzed 32 samples from nine nest territories by examining shared alleles between adults and nestlings. With this analysis, we identified previously unknown turnover and fidelity events, increased known ages of banded birds, and quantified and removed bias from IBO’s turnover estimations. Our work indicated that band-resight alone may be insufficient to produce accurate turnover estimates, and the inclusion of genetic analyses may mitigate inaccuracies. In addition, our results fundamentally altered IBO’s understanding of goshawk population dynamics within the forest. Text Northern Goshawk University of Montana: ScholarWorks
institution Open Polar
collection University of Montana: ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftunivmontana
language unknown
description The Northern Goshawk is listed as a management indicator species for the Minidoka Ranger District of the Sawtooth National Forest. This distinction has enhanced research interest on goshawk population health in the region. For raptors, annual adult turnover is considered a crucial metric of population health; providing insights into mortality, fidelity, and population disturbances. Over the past 25 years of studying goshawks, the Intermountain Bird Observatory (IBO) has observed abnormally high female turnover as compared to other places the species has been studied. Their estimations are based on banding and resighting birds, and may be biased high due to undetected marked birds and unknown age of birds when banded. To increase accuracy of IBO’s turnover data, we conducted parentage analyses using blood samples collected from goshawks in 2012-2016. We analyzed 32 samples from nine nest territories by examining shared alleles between adults and nestlings. With this analysis, we identified previously unknown turnover and fidelity events, increased known ages of banded birds, and quantified and removed bias from IBO’s turnover estimations. Our work indicated that band-resight alone may be insufficient to produce accurate turnover estimates, and the inclusion of genetic analyses may mitigate inaccuracies. In addition, our results fundamentally altered IBO’s understanding of goshawk population dynamics within the forest.
format Text
author Muench, Carly F
spellingShingle Muench, Carly F
Use of genetic techniques to address biases in northern goshawk turnover metrics
author_facet Muench, Carly F
author_sort Muench, Carly F
title Use of genetic techniques to address biases in northern goshawk turnover metrics
title_short Use of genetic techniques to address biases in northern goshawk turnover metrics
title_full Use of genetic techniques to address biases in northern goshawk turnover metrics
title_fullStr Use of genetic techniques to address biases in northern goshawk turnover metrics
title_full_unstemmed Use of genetic techniques to address biases in northern goshawk turnover metrics
title_sort use of genetic techniques to address biases in northern goshawk turnover metrics
publisher ScholarWorks at University of Montana
publishDate 2018
url https://scholarworks.umt.edu/umcur/2018/327/10
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/umcur/article/2009/type/native/viewcontent/_Turnover.pptx
genre Northern Goshawk
genre_facet Northern Goshawk
op_source University of Montana Conference on Undergraduate Research (UMCUR)
op_relation https://scholarworks.umt.edu/umcur/2018/327/10
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/umcur/article/2009/type/native/viewcontent/_Turnover.pptx
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