Abstract
Populations of forest birds were studied during two years of an outbreak of the elm spanworm Ennomus subsignarius (Hbn.) in a silviculturally unmanaged, old-growth conifer–northern hardwood forest on the Appalachian Plateau, PA. Canopy defoliation of hardwoods (mostly American beech Fagus grandifolia and red maple Acer rubrum) increased by at least 50% during the local peak of the outbreak (1993); territorial densities of birds were the highest (15% greater) during the regional peak of the outbreak (1994). Compared to a nearby but uninfested forest of similar age and composition, total bird abundance was as much as 22–33% higher at sites with extensive spanworm defoliation. In addition to canopy gleaners, several other foraging guilds exhibited one or more significant numerical responses to outbreak location or intensity, including bark foraging, understory gleaning, ground foraging, and pursuing species. Like other irruptions of forest Lepidoptera, populations of arboreal canopy-gleaning Parulinae (the warblers D. magnolia, D. fusca) were especially prone to fluctuate during this geometrid irruption.
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