Abstract
Abstract We investigated population trends, adult survival, and productivity indices of a breeding population of Warbling Vireos (Vireo gilvus) in north coastal California using capture-recapture data from 19 years of standardized mist-netting conducted at Point Reyes National Seashore. We found significant long-term declines in abundance of both breeding and migratory Warbling Vireos. In addition, we found a significant long-term decline of hatching-year birds captured during the breeding season. The number of new adults in a given year, defined as those birds not previously banded and assumed to be an index of adult recruitment, was significantly correlated with the capture rate of hatching-year birds in the previous year, suggesting a link between reproductive success and adult abundance and recruitment. Our analysis of capture-recapture data provided an estimate of 50.4% for adult annual survival, similar to estimates for other species in stable populations. We could detect no temporal trend in surviv...
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