Abstract

Understanding habitat preferences of grassland birds declining is important for their conservation. Currently, the use of remote sensing technology to describe the habitat of grassland birds is a novel tool in Mexico which may allow for more accurate assessments of grassland habitat. We used both, high-resolution photographs and a protocol established by Bird Conservancy of the Rockies that uses ocular estimation in order to estimate vegetation cover within areas where individual sparrows of the genus Ammodramus were recorded in two sites located in Durango. We radio tracked individuals of A. bairdii (n=33) and A. savannarum (n=23) daily (n=1881) and randomly selected 40 location points. Vegetation metric was obtained and from high-resolution photographs we created an orthomosaic with supervised classification in 4 classes of vegetation cover (%). At each bird location point, we estimated the percentage of each vegetation cover class within a 5 m radius area around the point. We did not find a significant difference between vegetation cover obtained by a high-resolution photographs or ocular estimations (p≤0.05) by species. Both species were found in areas with grass cover similar to those reported using different methods (61.24±4.07%, 62.78±4.24%). These results indicate that the use of remote sensing provide favorable information for the characterization of grassland bird’s habitat

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call