Abstract

Abstract. While there is growing awareness in ecology of spatial dependency, the application in avian ecology of spatially explicit statistical methods is rare in areas such as habitat—reproduction relationships. We compared nonspatial vs. spatially explicit tests of correlation between a measure of reproduction and a habitat attribute associated with Northern Flicker (Colaptes auratus) nests. While nonspatial tests showed a significant positive correlation between nest productivity and canopy cover of conifers, Dutilleul's modified t-test, which reduces the effective sample size by accounting for dependence among sampled nest trees, showed no significant correlation. These results may be due to spatial autocorrelation of both canopy cover of conifers and nest productivity at the scale of <1 km. Low localized nest productivity appears to have been driven by nest predation rather than by conifer cover. Our results illustrate the utility of this simple modification for examining ecological correlations in t...

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