Abstract
Silviculture can play an important role in managing avian habitat. In 2010 the Vermont Natural Resource Conservation Service, in conjunction with Audubon Vermont, implemented a Forest Stand Improvement initiative designed to improve timber quality while increasing habitat diversity for forest breeding songbirds. To evaluate the effectiveness of this program in improving avian habitat, we conducted point count surveys of breeding birds in harvested and control sites in 2012 and 2013, 1–3years post-harvest. Harvesting resulted in mean decreases of 18% in basal area, 10% in canopy cover, and 10% in canopy tree density while piles of woody debris per ha increased by 402%. Occupancy and abundance estimates for 24 and 18 bird species respectively were derived using Program MARK. Compared to controls, occupancy rates of four songbird species were greater on harvested sites – rose-breasted grosbeak (Pheucticus ludovicianus), yellow-bellied sapsucker (Sphyrapicus varius), chestnut-sided warbler (Setophaga pensylvanica), and mourning warbler (Geothlypis philadelphia)—while occupancy of one species—black-and-white warbler (S. fusca)—was significantly lower. Two species were significantly more abundant at harvested sites—rose-breasted grosbeak and yellow-bellied sapsucker—while two species were less abundant—hermit thrush (Catharus guttatus) and black-and-white warbler. Piles of woody debris left after harvests were negatively associated with site occupancy for 3 out of 10 understory species. Overall, our results suggest that this program retains all interior forest species and has a slight positive impact on gap and early successional species abundance and occupancy in the first 1–3years post-harvest. This study provides the first quantitative examination of the impact that Vermont NRCS’s Forest Stand Improvement program has had on forest breeding birds.
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