Abstract

Quantifying spatial and temporal variability in population trends is a critical aspect of successful management of imperiled species. We evaluated territory occupancy dynamics of northern spotted owls (Strix occidentalis caurina), California, USA, 1990–2014. The study area possessed two unique aspects. First, timber management has occurred for over 100 years, resulting in dramatically different forest successional and structural conditions compared to other areas. Second, the barred owl (Strix varia), an exotic congener known to exert significant negative effects on spotted owls, has not colonized the study area. We used a Bayesian dynamic multistate model to evaluate if territory occupancy of reproductive spotted owls has declined as in other study areas. The state-space approach for dynamic multistate modeling imputes the number of territories for each nesting state and allows for the estimation of longer-term trends in occupied or reproductive territories from longitudinal studies. The multistate approach accounts for different detection probabilities by nesting state (to account for either inherent differences in detection or for the use of different survey methods for different occupancy states) and reduces bias in state assignment. Estimated linear trends in the number of reproductive territories suggested an average loss of approximately one half territory per year (-0.55, 90% CRI: -0.76, -0.33), in one management block and a loss of 0.15 per year (-0.15, 90% CRI: -0.24, -0.07), in another management block during the 25 year observation period. Estimated trends in the third management block were also negative, but substantial uncertainty existed in the estimate (-0.09, 90% CRI: -0.35, 0.17). Our results indicate that the number of territories occupied by northern spotted owl pairs remained relatively constant over a 25 year period (-0.07, 90% CRI: -0.20, 0.05; -0.01, 90% CRI: -0.19, 0.16; -0.16, 90% CRI: -0.40, 0.06). However, we cannot exclude small-to-moderate declines or increases in paired territory numbers due to uncertainty in our estimates. Collectively, we conclude spotted owl pair populations on this landscape managed for commercial timber production appear to be more stable and do not show sharp year-over-year declines seen in both managed and unmanaged landscapes with substantial barred owl colonization and persistence. Continued monitoring of reproductive territories can determine whether recent declines continue or whether trends reverse as they have on four previous occasions. Experimental investigations to evaluate changes to spotted owl occupancy dynamics when barred owl populations are reduced or removed entirely can confirm the generality of this conclusion.

Highlights

  • Long-term ecological studies often investigate population dynamics as a function of habitat quality, competition, meta-population structure, and other factors

  • Instead, barred owl presence may exert a negative effect on spotted owl territory occupancy [9, 10]

  • We did not find evidence to indicate that territory occupancy by northern spotted owl pairs declined substantially over a 25 year period on the Mendocino County, CA, study area. These results stand in marked contrast to other studies that examined northern spotted owl occupancy dynamics over extended time frames and found evidence indicating significant declines [9, 11,12,13,14,15]

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Summary

Introduction

Long-term ecological studies often investigate population dynamics as a function of habitat quality, competition, meta-population structure, and other factors. Recent, rapid expansion of barred owl (Strix varia) populations throughout much of the distribution of the spotted owl exacerbated population declines [6,7,8,9]. Presence of this novel ecological competitor can have negative consequences for spotted owl productivity and adult survival [10, 11], Anthony et al [10] found little support for a negative association between barred owl presence and spotted owl fecundity. Due to the near ubiquity of barred owls throughout the distribution of spotted owls, information is not available to evaluate the original premise that spotted owl populations would recover as habitat conditions improved and as conservation measures were implemented where active timber management continued to occur [4]

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