Abstract

We know little regarding how specific aspects of habitat influence spatial variation in site occupancy by Arctic wildlife, yet this information is fundamental to effective conservation. To address this information gap, we assessed occupancy of 84 Gyrfalcon (Falco rusticolus Linnaeus, 1758) breeding territories observed annually between 2004 and 2013 in western Alaska. In line with the theory of population regulation by site dependence, we asked whether Gyrfalcons exhibited a nonrandom pattern of site selection and if heterogeneous landscape attributes correlated with observed occupancy patterns. We characterized high- and low-occupancy breeding territories as those occupied more or less often than expected by chance, and we evaluated land cover at 1 and 15 km circles centered around nesting territories to identify habitat variables associated with observed occupancy patterns. We tested 15 competing models to rank hypotheses reflecting prey and habitat variables important to nesting Gyrfalcons. We confirmed a nonrandom pattern of site selection but found only weak evidence that the distribution of prey habitat was responsible for this pattern. We reason that preferential habitat use by nesting Gyrfalcons may be determined by spatial scales other than those we measured or may be driven by landscape-level attributes at time periods other than during the brood rearing period.

Highlights

  • The regulation of animal populations is a central focus of ecology (Murdoch 1994)

  • Empirical evidence for site-dependent population regulation often consists of observed patterns of occupancy that deviate from a random pattern and temporal or spatial variation in the distribution of environmental resources that affect habitat quality (Newton 1991; Sergio and Newton 2003)

  • Sergio and Newton (2003) reviewed 22 bird studies including 14 raptor species, all of which revealed nonrandom patterns of occupancy correlated with reproduction and other measures of territory quality, suggesting that site-dependent population regulation is common for predatory birds

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Summary

Introduction

The regulation of animal populations is a central focus of ecology (Murdoch 1994). In a changing world, understanding population regulation is relevant to wildlife management in which explaining species abundances, conducting conservation assessments, and designing adaptive management plans require baseline knowledge on population regulation. As a population expands and good sites become fully occupied, some individuals must settle in poor sites where they experience low survival or decreased reproduction, lowering the growth rate of the population (Ferrer and Donazar 1996; Rodenhouse et al 1997; Hunt and Law 2000). This preemptive use of sites in a heterogeneous landscape acts as a negative feedback mechanism on population sizes, regulating animal populations (Rodenhouse et al 1997; Hunt and Law 2000). Sergio and Newton (2003) reviewed 22 bird studies including 14 raptor species, all of which revealed nonrandom patterns of occupancy correlated with reproduction and other measures of territory quality, suggesting that site-dependent population regulation is common for predatory birds

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