Foraging ecology of bald eagles on the northern Chesapeake Bay with an examination of techniques used in the study of bald eagle food habits
We monitored distribution and abundance of food resources and determined food habits of nonbreeding bald eagles ( Haliaeetus leucocephalus ) on the northern Chesapeake Bay, as a preliminary step toward examining food-base effects on bald eagle distribution and abundance. To correctly interpret our f...
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Virginia Tech
1989
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ftvirginiatec:oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/46051 2024-05-19T07:38:29+00:00 Foraging ecology of bald eagles on the northern Chesapeake Bay with an examination of techniques used in the study of bald eagle food habits Mersmann, Timothy James Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences Fraser, James D. Kirkpatrick, Roy L. Neves, RIchard J. Stauffer, Dean F. 1989-11-05 xiii, 132 leaves BTD application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10919/46051 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11292012-040124/ en eng Virginia Tech OCLC# 21206840 LD5655.V855_1989.M477.pdf etd-11292012-040124 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/46051 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11292012-040124/ In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ LD5655.V855 1989.M477 Bald eagle -- Chesapeake Bay Region (Md and Va) Birds -- Chesapeake Bay Region (Md and Va) Thesis Text 1989 ftvirginiatec 2024-05-01T00:59:43Z We monitored distribution and abundance of food resources and determined food habits of nonbreeding bald eagles ( Haliaeetus leucocephalus ) on the northern Chesapeake Bay, as a preliminary step toward examining food-base effects on bald eagle distribution and abundance. To correctly interpret our food habits results, we first examined biases of 2 commonly-used food habits techniques, pellet analysis and food remains collection, through feeding trials with 2 captive bald eagles. Eagles were fed a variety of food items found on the northern Bay. Egested pellet contents and frequency of remains were compared with actual diet. We also examined efficacy of direct observation by observing eagles in high-use foraging areas. We found pellet analysis accurately indicated the species of birds and mammals eaten, but overrepresented medium-sized mammals and underrepresented large carrion in percent occurrence results. Fish were poorly represented in pellets. Eagles rarely produced pellets after eating fish, suggesting that pellet egestion rate, defined as the number of pellets produced per eagle per night, can serve as an index to relative use of birds and mammals. Food remains collection was highly biased toward birds, medium~sized mammals, and large, bony fish. Direct observation was labor intensive and required close proximity of the observer for unbiased identification of food items. Observation may be the only means of documenting eagles' use of small, soft-bodied fish. We used direct observation, pellet analysis, and pellet formation rates to determine bald eagle food habits from December 1986 through April 1988. We monitored fish abundance by gill netting and waterfowl abundance by aerial surveys over this same period. Fish and waterfowl abundance varied reciprocally; waterfowl numbers peaked in winter and fish numbers peaked in spring and late summer. Bald eagles responded to differences in food abundance with diet shifts. Canada geese ( Branta canadensis ), mallard ( Anas platyrhynchos ), and white-tailed deer ( ... Thesis Branta canadensis VTechWorks (VirginiaTech) |
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Open Polar |
collection |
VTechWorks (VirginiaTech) |
op_collection_id |
ftvirginiatec |
language |
English |
topic |
LD5655.V855 1989.M477 Bald eagle -- Chesapeake Bay Region (Md and Va) Birds -- Chesapeake Bay Region (Md and Va) |
spellingShingle |
LD5655.V855 1989.M477 Bald eagle -- Chesapeake Bay Region (Md and Va) Birds -- Chesapeake Bay Region (Md and Va) Mersmann, Timothy James Foraging ecology of bald eagles on the northern Chesapeake Bay with an examination of techniques used in the study of bald eagle food habits |
topic_facet |
LD5655.V855 1989.M477 Bald eagle -- Chesapeake Bay Region (Md and Va) Birds -- Chesapeake Bay Region (Md and Va) |
description |
We monitored distribution and abundance of food resources and determined food habits of nonbreeding bald eagles ( Haliaeetus leucocephalus ) on the northern Chesapeake Bay, as a preliminary step toward examining food-base effects on bald eagle distribution and abundance. To correctly interpret our food habits results, we first examined biases of 2 commonly-used food habits techniques, pellet analysis and food remains collection, through feeding trials with 2 captive bald eagles. Eagles were fed a variety of food items found on the northern Bay. Egested pellet contents and frequency of remains were compared with actual diet. We also examined efficacy of direct observation by observing eagles in high-use foraging areas. We found pellet analysis accurately indicated the species of birds and mammals eaten, but overrepresented medium-sized mammals and underrepresented large carrion in percent occurrence results. Fish were poorly represented in pellets. Eagles rarely produced pellets after eating fish, suggesting that pellet egestion rate, defined as the number of pellets produced per eagle per night, can serve as an index to relative use of birds and mammals. Food remains collection was highly biased toward birds, medium~sized mammals, and large, bony fish. Direct observation was labor intensive and required close proximity of the observer for unbiased identification of food items. Observation may be the only means of documenting eagles' use of small, soft-bodied fish. We used direct observation, pellet analysis, and pellet formation rates to determine bald eagle food habits from December 1986 through April 1988. We monitored fish abundance by gill netting and waterfowl abundance by aerial surveys over this same period. Fish and waterfowl abundance varied reciprocally; waterfowl numbers peaked in winter and fish numbers peaked in spring and late summer. Bald eagles responded to differences in food abundance with diet shifts. Canada geese ( Branta canadensis ), mallard ( Anas platyrhynchos ), and white-tailed deer ( ... |
author2 |
Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences Fraser, James D. Kirkpatrick, Roy L. Neves, RIchard J. Stauffer, Dean F. |
format |
Thesis |
author |
Mersmann, Timothy James |
author_facet |
Mersmann, Timothy James |
author_sort |
Mersmann, Timothy James |
title |
Foraging ecology of bald eagles on the northern Chesapeake Bay with an examination of techniques used in the study of bald eagle food habits |
title_short |
Foraging ecology of bald eagles on the northern Chesapeake Bay with an examination of techniques used in the study of bald eagle food habits |
title_full |
Foraging ecology of bald eagles on the northern Chesapeake Bay with an examination of techniques used in the study of bald eagle food habits |
title_fullStr |
Foraging ecology of bald eagles on the northern Chesapeake Bay with an examination of techniques used in the study of bald eagle food habits |
title_full_unstemmed |
Foraging ecology of bald eagles on the northern Chesapeake Bay with an examination of techniques used in the study of bald eagle food habits |
title_sort |
foraging ecology of bald eagles on the northern chesapeake bay with an examination of techniques used in the study of bald eagle food habits |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
1989 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/46051 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11292012-040124/ |
genre |
Branta canadensis |
genre_facet |
Branta canadensis |
op_relation |
OCLC# 21206840 LD5655.V855_1989.M477.pdf etd-11292012-040124 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/46051 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11292012-040124/ |
op_rights |
In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ |
_version_ |
1799477942413164544 |