TEETERING ON THE EDGE OR TOO LATE? CONSERVATION AND RESEARCH ISSUES FOR AVIFAUNA OF SAGEBRUSH HABITATS

Abstract Degradation, fragmentation, and loss of native sagebrush (Artemisia spp.) landscapes have imperiled these habitats and their associated avifauna. Historically, this vast piece of the Western landscape has been undervalued: even though more than 70% of all remaining sagebrush habitat in the United States is publicly owned, <3% of it is protected as federal reserves or national parks. We review the threats facing birds in sagebrush habitats to emphasize the urgency for conservation and research actions, and synthesize existing information that forms the foundation for recommended research directions. Management and conservation of birds in sagebrush habitats will require more research into four major topics: (1) identification of primary land-use practices and their influence on sagebrush habitats and birds, (2) better understanding of bird responses to habitat components and disturbance processes of sagebrush ecosystems, (3) improved hierarchical designs for surveying and monitoring programs, and (4) linking bird movements and population changes during migration and wintering periods to dynamics on the sagebrush breeding grounds. This research is essential because we already have seen that sagebrush habitats can be altered by land use, spread of invasive plants, and disrupted disturbance regimes beyond a threshold at which natural recovery is unlikely. Research on these issues should be instituted on lands managed by state or federal agencies because most lands still dominated by sagebrush are owned publicly. In addition to the challenge of understanding shrubsteppe bird-habitat dynamics, conservation of sagebrush landscapes depends on our ability to recognize and communicate their intrinsic value and on our resolve to conserve them. ¿Tambaleando en el Borde o Demasiado Tarde? Asuntos de Conservación e Investigación para la Avifauna de Ambientes de Matorral de Artemisia spp Resumen. La degradación, fragmentación y pérdida de paisajes nativos de matorrales de Artemisia spp. han puesto en peligro a estos ambientes y su avifauna asociada. Históricamente, esta vasta porción del paisaje occidental ha sido subvalorada: aunque más del 70% de todo el hábitat de matorral de Artemisia de los Estados Unidos es de propiedad pública, <3% de éste es protegido por reservas federales o parques nacionales. En este artículo revisamos las amenazas a las que se enfrentan las aves de los matorrales de Artemisia para enfatizar la urgencia de emprender acciones de conservación e investigación, y sintetizamos la información existente que constituye la base para una serie de directrices de investigación recomendadas. El manejo y conservación de las aves de los matorrales de Artemisia necesitará más investigación en cuatro tópicos principales: (1) la identificación de prácticas primarias de uso del suelo y su influencia sobre los ambientes y las aves de Artemisia, (2) un mejor entendimiento de las respuestas de las aves a componentes del hábitat y a procesos de disturbio de los ecosistemas de Artemisia, (3) el mejoramiento de diseños jerárquicos para programas de censos y monitoreos y (4) la conexión de los movimientos de las aves y los cambios poblacionales durante la migración y en los períodos de invernada con la dinámica en las áreas reproductivas de matorrales de Artemisia. Estas investigaciones son esenciales porque ya hemos visto que los ambientes de Artemisia pueden ser alterados por el uso del suelo, la diseminación de plantas invasoras y la disrupción de los regímenes de disturbio más allá de un umbral en el que la recuperación natural es poco probable. La investigación en estos asuntos debe instituirse en tierras manejadas por agencias estatales o federales porque la mayoría de las tierras aún dominadas por Artemisia son de propiedad pública. Además del desafío de entender la dinámica aves-hábitat en las estepas arbustivas, la conservación de los paisajes de matorral de Artemisia depende de nuestra habilidad de reconocer y comunicar su valor intrínseco y de nuestra decisión para conservarlos.

[1]  R. N. Mack,et al.  Evolution in Steppe with Few Large, Hooved Mammals , 1982, The American Naturalist.

[2]  R. L. Knight,et al.  Direct and Indirect Effects of Insecticide Applications on Growth and Survival of Nestling Passerines , 1996 .

[3]  Richard Miller,et al.  HOLOCENE CHANGES IN SEMIARID PINYON-JUNIPER WOODLANDS , 1994 .

[4]  L. Best First-Year Effects of Sagebrush Control on Two Sparrows , 1972 .

[5]  N. Gotelli Predicting Species Occurrences: Issues of Accuracy and Scale , 2003 .

[6]  W. Laycock Stable states and thresholds of range condition on North American rangelands: a viewpoint. , 1991 .

[7]  J. Michael Scott,et al.  Predicting Species Occurrences: Issues of Accuracy and Scale , 2002 .

[8]  T. Vale Sagebrush conversion projects: An element of contemporary environmental change in the Western United States , 1974 .

[9]  Barry R. Noon,et al.  SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND THE SPOTTED OWL (STRIX OCCIDENTALIS): OPPORTUNITIES FOR MAJOR CONTRIBUTIONS TO AVIAN POPULATION ECOLOGY , 2002 .

[10]  J. Wiens,et al.  RESPONSE OF BREEDING PASSERINE BIRDS TO RANGELAND ALTERATION IN A NORTH AMERICAN SHRUBSTEPPE LOCALITY , 1985 .

[11]  J. Rotenberry,et al.  Evaluation of Bias in Roadside Point Count Surveys of Passerines in Shrubsteppe and Grassland Habitats in Southwestern Idaho , 1995 .

[12]  R. Holthausen,et al.  Source habitats for terrestrial vertebrates of focus in the interior Columbia basin: broadscale trends and management implications. Volume 1—Overview. , 2000 .

[13]  P. Pyle,et al.  Ferruginous Hawk (Buteo regalis) , 2020, Birds of the World.

[14]  B. Welch,et al.  Conservation of greater sage-grouse on public lands in the western U.S.: Implications of recovery and management policies , 2002 .

[15]  J. Wiens Spatial Scaling in Ecology , 1989 .

[16]  G. Gottfried,et al.  Biodiversity and management of the Madrean Archipelago: The Sky Islands of southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico , 1995 .

[17]  Carl J. Walters,et al.  Adaptive Management of Renewable Resources , 1986 .

[18]  A. Hull Species for seeding arid rangeland in southern Idaho. , 1974 .

[19]  J. Connelly,et al.  EFFECTS OF PRESCRIBED FIRE ON MOVEMENTS OF FEMALE SAGE GROUSE FROM BREEDING TO SUMMER RANGES , 1997 .

[20]  Matthew Vander Haegen,et al.  Status of Washington's Shrub-Steppe Ecosystem: Extent, ownership, and wildlife/vegetation relationships , 1996 .

[21]  V. Saab,et al.  Large-scale conservation assessment for Neotropical migratory land birds in the interior Columbia River basin. , 1997 .

[22]  J. Mciver,et al.  Restoration of degraded lands in the interior Columbia River basin: passive vs. active approaches , 2001 .

[23]  J. Holechek,et al.  Range Management: Principles and Practices , 1989 .

[24]  Michael L. Morrison,et al.  A Proposed Research Emphasis to Overcome the Limits of Wildlife-Habitat Relationship Studies , 2001 .

[25]  Steven T. Knick,et al.  Supervised classification of Landsat Thematic Mapper imagery in a semi-arid rangeland by nonparametric discriminant analysis , 1997 .

[26]  W. Pyle,et al.  Nest site relationships among cavity-nesting birds of riparian and snowpocket aspen woodlands in the northwestern Great Basin , 1995 .

[27]  John W. Martin,et al.  Sage Sparrow (Amphispiza belli) , 1998 .

[28]  D. O. Logofet Matrix Population Models: Construction, Analysis, and Interpretation , 2002 .

[29]  Reed F. Noss,et al.  Endangered Ecosystems of the United States: A Preliminary Assessment of Loss and Degradation , 1996, Restoration & Management Notes.

[30]  J. Rotenberry,et al.  The role of habitat in avian community composition: physiognomy or floristics? , 1985, Oecologia.

[31]  J. Rotenberry,et al.  GHOSTS OF HABITATS PAST: CONTRIBUTION OF LANDSCAPE CHANGE TO CURRENT HABITATS USED BY SHRUBLAND BIRDS , 2000 .

[32]  D. Inkley,et al.  Regional correspondence among shrubsteppe bird habitats , 1990 .

[33]  J. M. Scott,et al.  Noah's Options: Initial Cost Estimates of a National System of Habitat Conservation Areas in the United States , 2002 .

[34]  R. A. Evans,et al.  Nongame Bird Community Responses to Sagebrush Invasion of Crested Wheatgrass Seedings , 1989 .

[35]  K. Steenhof,et al.  Nesting by Raptors and Common Ravens on Electrical Transmission Line Towers , 1993 .

[36]  John A. Wiens,et al.  Habitat occupancy patterns of North American shrubsteppe birds: the effects of spatial scale , 1987 .

[37]  P. Succop,et al.  For the reference , see : Journal of Agricultural , Biological and Environmental Statistics , 2000 .

[38]  J. Connelly,et al.  Long-term changes in sage grouse Centrocercus urophasianus populations in western North America , 1997, Wildlife Biology.

[39]  Michael L. Morrison,et al.  Wildlife Restoration: Techniques for Habitat Analysis and Animal Monitoring , 2002 .

[40]  R. G. Wright,et al.  Representation of natural vegetation in protected areas: capturing the geographic range , 2001, Biodiversity & Conservation.

[41]  J. Wiens,et al.  WEATHER AND REPRODUCTIVE VARIATION IN SHRUBSTEPPE SPARROWS: A HIERARCHICAL ANALYSIS' , 1991 .

[42]  Terry L. Root,et al.  Atlas of Wintering North American Birds: An Analysis of Christmas Bird Count Data , 1988 .

[43]  C. Braun SAGE GROUSE DECLINES IN WESTERN NORTH AMERICA: WHAT ARE THE PROBLEMS? , 1998 .

[44]  John A. Wiens,et al.  Habitat Associations and Community Structure of Birds in Shrubsteppe Environments , 1981 .

[45]  Swainson's Hawk (Buteo swainsoni) , 1997 .

[46]  N. West Strategies for Maintenance and Repair of Biotic Community Diversity on Rangelands , 1996 .

[47]  J. Wiens,et al.  A LESSON IN THE LIMITATIONS OF FIELD EXPERIMENTS: SHRUBSTEPPE BIRDS AND HABITAT ALTERATION' , 1986 .

[48]  U. Fish Endangered and threatened wildlife and plants , 1987 .

[49]  Douglas H. Johnson Point Counts of Birds: What Are We Estimating? , 1995 .

[50]  Michael J. Wisdom,et al.  Status and trends of habitats of terrestrial vertebrates in relation to land management in the interior Columbia river basin , 2001 .

[51]  D. Dobkin,et al.  Conservation and Management of Neotropical Migrant Landbirds in the Northern Rockies and Great Plains , 1992 .

[52]  R. Olson,et al.  Restoring Structure in Late‐Successional Sagebrush Communities by Thinning with Tebuthiuron , 2002 .

[53]  P. Vitousek,et al.  Biological invasions by exotic grasses, the grass/fire cycle, and global change , 1992 .

[54]  C. Braun Oil and Gas Development in Western North America : Effects on Sagebrush Steppe Avifauna with Particular Emphasis on Sage-grouse , 2002 .

[55]  J. Chambers,et al.  Use of native plants on federal lands: policy and practice. , 1998 .

[56]  J. F. Pechanec,et al.  Sagebrush control on rangelands. , 1965 .

[57]  W. M. V. Haegen,et al.  Shrubsteppe Bird Response to Habitat and Landscape Variables in Eastern Washington, U.S.A. , 2000 .

[58]  D. Hays,et al.  CHANGES IN THE DISTRIBUTION AND ABUNDANCE OF COLUMBIAN SHARP TAILED GROUSE IN WASHINGTON , 2000 .

[59]  E. Allen The Reconstruction Of Disturbed Arid Lands: An Ecological Approach , 1988 .

[60]  A. Poole,et al.  Long-billed Curlew (Numenius americanus) , 2020, Birds of the World.

[61]  John A. Wiens,et al.  The Ecology Of Bird Communities , 1989 .

[62]  J. Rotenberry,et al.  Landscape characteristics of disturbed shrubsteppe habitats in southwestern Idaho (U.S.A.) , 1997, Landscape Ecology.

[63]  C. Paige,et al.  Birds in a sagebrush sea : managing sagebrush habitats for bird communities / , 1999 .

[64]  N. Mathews,et al.  Local Gradients of Cowbird Abundance and Parasitism Relative to Livestock Grazing in a Western Landscape , 2000, Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology.

[65]  L. Best,et al.  Effect of prescribed burning on placement of sage sparrow nests , 1985 .

[66]  S. Monsen,et al.  Proceedings - Ecology and management of annual rangelands , 1994 .

[67]  David A. Pyke,et al.  Invasive plants and fire in the deserts of North America , 2002 .

[68]  Steven T. Knick,et al.  Limitations to mapping habitat-use areas in changing landscapes using the Mahalanobis distance statistic , 1998 .

[69]  Richard Miller,et al.  Spatial and temporal changes of sage grouse habitat in the sagebrush biome , 2000 .

[70]  T. Fleischner,et al.  Ecological Costs of Livestock Grazing in Western North America , 1994 .

[71]  J. Wiens,et al.  Temporal variation in habitat structure and shrubsteppe bird dynamics , 2004, Oecologia.

[72]  J. Belnap,et al.  Roads as Conduits for Exotic Plant Invasions in a Semiarid Landscape , 2003 .

[73]  K. P. Reese,et al.  LANDSCAPE CHANGES WITHIN THE HISTORICAL DISTRIBUTION OF COLUMBIAN SHARP-TAILED GROUSE IN EASTERN WASHINGTON : IS THERE HOPE? , 1998 .

[74]  A. Poole,et al.  Loggerhead Shrike (Lanius ludovicianus) , 2020, Birds of the World.

[75]  R. O'Neill,et al.  Landscape Ecology Explained@@@Landscape Ecology in Theory and Practice: Pattern and Process , 2001 .

[76]  E. Allen,et al.  The Arid West , 1992, Restoration & Management Notes.

[77]  J. Belnap,et al.  Biological Soil Crusts: Structure, Function, and Management , 2003, Ecological Studies.

[78]  D. Pierce,et al.  CHANGES IN THE DISTRIBUTION AND ABUNDANCE OF SAGE GROUSE IN WASHINGTON , 2000 .

[79]  C. Braun,et al.  Conservation Committee Report on Effects of Alteration of Sagebrush Communities on the Associated Avifauna , 1976 .

[80]  C. Bock,et al.  Birds as grazing indicator species in southeastern Arizona , 1984 .

[81]  Michael J. Wisdom,et al.  Sagebrush‐Steppe Vegetation Dynamics and Restoration Potential in the Interior Columbia Basin, U.S.A. , 2002 .

[82]  D. Mehlman,et al.  Avian Movements and Wetland Connectivity in Landscape Conservation , 1998 .

[83]  Richard Miller,et al.  Fire History and Western Juniper Encroachment in Sagebrush Steppe , 1999 .

[84]  R. G. Wright,et al.  NATURE RESERVES: DO THEY CAPTURE THE FULL RANGE OF AMERICA'S BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY? , 2001 .

[85]  Pacific Southwest Forest,et al.  Wildlife 2000: Modeling Habitat Relationships of Terrestrial Vertebrates , 1987 .

[86]  Hobson,et al.  Linking winter and summer events in a migratory bird by using stable-carbon isotopes , 1998, Science.

[87]  C. S. Robbins,et al.  The Breeding Bird Survey: Its First Fifteen Years, 1965-1979 , 1987 .

[88]  J. Connelly,et al.  Guidelines to manage sage grouse populations and their habitats. , 2000 .

[89]  Robert G. Bailey,et al.  Ecoregions of North America , 1981 .

[90]  D. Dawson Brewer's sparrow (Spizella breweri) , 1983 .

[91]  R. S. Thompson,et al.  Biomes of western North America at 18,000, 6000 and 0 14C yr bp reconstructed from pollen and packrat midden data , 2000 .

[92]  J. Castrale Effects of Two Sagebrush Control Methods on Nongame Birds , 1982 .

[93]  J. Wiens,et al.  Habitat Structure, Patchiness, and Avian Communities in North American Steppe Vegetation: A Multivariate Analysis , 1980 .

[94]  D. Finch,et al.  Ecology and Management of Neotropical Migratory Birds: A Synthesis and Review of Critical Issues , 1995 .

[95]  James A. Young,et al.  Effectiveness of rehabilitation practices following wildfire in a degraded big sagebrush downy brome community. , 1978 .

[96]  W. M. V. Haegen PARASITISM BY BROWN-HEADED COWBIRDS IN THE SHRUBSTEPPE OF EASTERN WASHINGTON , 1998 .

[97]  S. Fretwell Populations in a seasonal environment. , 1973, Monographs in population biology.

[98]  J. Rotenberry,et al.  Effects of habitat fragmentation on passerine birds breeding in Intermountain shrubsteppe , 2002 .

[99]  J. Rotenberry,et al.  Spatial distribution of breeding passerine bird habitats in a shrubsteppe region of southwestern Idaho , 1998 .

[100]  Miles A. Hemstrom,et al.  Modeled Effects of Sagebrush‐Steppe Restoration on Greater Sage‐Grouse in the Interior Columbia Basin, U.S.A. , 2002 .

[101]  Gene M. Gressley,et al.  Cattle in the Cold Desert , 1987 .

[102]  R. G. Wright,et al.  Identifying unprotected and potentially at risk plant communities in the western USA , 2001 .

[103]  J. Connelly,et al.  Response of a Sage Grouse Breeding Population to Fire in Southeastern Idaho , 2000 .

[104]  Dana L. Yensen The 1900 Invasion of Alien Plants into Southern Idaho , 1981 .

[105]  K. Petersen,et al.  Seasonal changes in detectability of Sage and Brewer's Sparrows , 1985 .

[106]  Richard N. Mack,et al.  Invasion of Bromus tectorum L. into Western North America: An ecological chronicle , 1981 .

[107]  C. Frissell,et al.  Review of Ecological Effects of Roads on Terrestrial and Aquatic Communities , 2000 .

[108]  D. Pyke,et al.  Research Plan for Lands Administered by the U.S. Department of the Interior in the Interior Columbia Basin and Snake River Plateau , 2002 .

[109]  Landsborough Thomson,et al.  Birds of North America , 1962, Nature.

[110]  S. Haig,et al.  Monitoring species richness and abundance of shorebirds in the western Great Basin , 1998 .

[111]  Steven T Knick,et al.  Landscape Characteristics of Fragmented Shrubsteppe Habitats and Breeding Passerine Birds. , 1995, Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology.

[112]  Stanley D. Smith,et al.  Proceedings: wildland shrub and arid land restoration symposium , 1995 .

[113]  Thomas M. Quigley,et al.  An assessment of ecosystem components in the interior Columbia basin and portions of the Klamath and Great Basins: volume 1. , 1997 .

[114]  Thomas B. Starr,et al.  Hierarchy: Perspectives for Ecological Complexity , 1982 .

[115]  R. Shane,et al.  Relationship between selected factors and internal rate of return from sagebrush removal and seeding crested wheatgrass. , 1983 .

[116]  J. H. Bock,et al.  Proposal for a system of federal livestock exclosures on public rangelands in the Western United States , 1993 .

[117]  K. H. Asay,et al.  Merits of native and introduced Triticeae grasses on semiarid rangelands , 2001 .

[118]  E. Mcarthur,et al.  Proceedings: Wildland Shrub and Arid Land Restoration Symposium , 1995 .

[119]  J. Rotenberry,et al.  Multiscale habitat associations of the sage sparrow: Implications for conservation biology , 1999 .

[120]  W. Pyle,et al.  Habitat and Avifaunal Recovery from Livestock Grazing in a Riparian Meadow System of the Northwestern Great Basin , 1998 .

[121]  A Minimalist Approach to Mapping Species Habitat: Pearson's Planes of Closest Fit , 2002 .

[122]  A. Poole,et al.  Sharp-tailed Grouse (Tympanuchus phasianellus) , 1998 .

[123]  M. Schroeder,et al.  PREDATION ON REAL AND ARTIFICIAL NESTS IN SHRUBSTEPPE LANDSCAPES FRAGMENTED BY AGRICULTURE , 2002 .

[124]  Michael J. Mac,et al.  Status and trends of the nation's biological resources , 2001 .

[125]  James A. Young,et al.  Cattle in the Cold Desert , 1987 .

[126]  R. Holthausen,et al.  Source habitats for terrestrial vertebrates of focus in the interior Columbia basin: broad-scale trends and management implications. Volume 3 - appendices. , 2000 .

[127]  B. V. Horne,et al.  DENSITY AS A MISLEADING INDICATOR OF HABITAT QUALITY , 1983 .

[128]  Bruce G. Peterjohn,et al.  Population status of North American grassland birds from the North American Breeding Bird Survey , 1999 .

[129]  J. Wiens,et al.  REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY OF SHRUBSTEPPE PASSERINE BIRDS: GEOGRAPHICAL AND TEMPORAL VARIATION IN CLUTCH SIZE, BROOD SIZE, AND FLEDGING SUCCESS' , 1989 .

[130]  R. Hull Burrowing owl (Speotyto cunicularia) , 1988 .

[131]  D. Finch,et al.  Ecology and Management of Neotropical Migratory Birds. , 1997 .

[132]  Dean L. Mitchell,et al.  Changes in the distribution and status of sage-grouse in Utah , 2003 .

[133]  J. Rotenberry,et al.  CHOICES AND CONSEQUENCES OF HABITAT OCCUPANCY AND NEST SITE SELECTION IN SAGE SPARROWS , 2000 .

[134]  Barbara Allen-Diaz,et al.  SAGEBRUSH-GRASS VEGETATION DYNAMICS: COMPARING CLASSICAL AND STATE-TRANSITION MODELS , 1998 .

[135]  R. L. Knight,et al.  RESPONSES OF RAVEN AND RED-TAILED HAWK POPULATIONS TO LINEAR RIGHT-OF-WAYS , 1993 .

[136]  J. Tewksbury,et al.  EFFECTS OF ANTHROPOGENIC FRAGMENTATION AND LIVESTOCK GRAZING ON WESTERN RIPARIAN BIRD COMMUNITIES , 2002 .