Using multi-scalar habitat modelling of wood thrush in central Pennsylvania to inform novel forest management
Open Access
- Author:
- Parkhill, Nathaniel
- Graduate Program:
- Wildlife and Fisheries Science
- Degree:
- Master of Science
- Document Type:
- Master Thesis
- Date of Defense:
- March 03, 2021
- Committee Members:
- Margaret Brittingham, Thesis Advisor/Co-Advisor
David Andrew Miller, Committee Member
Margot Wilkinson Kaye, Committee Member
Bradley Cardinale, Program Head/Chair - Keywords:
- wildlife
forestry
habitat
wood thrush
forest management
birds
occupancy modelling
multi scalar - Abstract:
- Wood thrush (Hylocichla mustelina) have declined dramatically in recent decades across Eastern North American breeding grounds. With increasing fragmentation of mature eastern forests, remaining breeding habitat within large core forests becomes increasingly important for this area-sensitive species. Identifying factors influencing habitat selection in contiguous forests where wood thrush have higher nest success is important to understanding how to attract wood thrush to these higher quality sites. Focusing on the vegetation structure that influences habitat selection helps to identify important structural features. We can then emulate these features to improve wood thrush habitat in these contiguous forests which are inherently buffered from the nest predation brought on by forest fragmentation. Existing forest management guidelines for wood thrush describe conditions and identify forest stands where wood thrush are likely to be present. Improving upon these guidelines, we sought to develop within-stand forest management techniques informed by multi-scalar habitat selection. Focusing on finer scale habitat selection within-stands allowed us to identify important forest structure for developing silvicultural approaches to wood thrush breeding habitat management. In the first chapter, we took a multi-scalar approach, statistically modelling structural features driving territory and nest-site selection in order to gain a more complete understanding of breeding season habitat selection. Examining the influence of forest structure on habitat selection, we used these insights to develop and implement a novel forest management technique to provide preferred forest structure in the oak and mixed hardwood forests of Pennsylvania. In order to model the forest structure influencing territory selection, we estimated wood thrush occupancy using point counts at 241 survey points within 27 oak and mixed-hardwood stands across six study sites in Central Pennsylvania in the breeding seasons of 2018 and 2019. We collected a suite of forest structural measurements at each survey point and used an occupancy modelling approach to model both detection probability and wood thrush territory selection in terms of forest structure. We also searched for wood thrush nests opportunistically across our study sites. To model nest-site selection, we measured forest structure at each nest site and at paired available points within the surrounding territory, comparing the two with a conditional logistic regression analysis. Our best fitting territory selection model showed increasing predicted occupancy (Φ) with increasing understory cover (0.6 at 0% understory cover versus 0.94 at 100% understory cover) and decreasing predicted occupancy with increasing woody ground cover (0.8 at 0% woody ground cover versus 0.15 at 100% woody ground cover). Occupancy did not vary with midstory cover, canopy cover, basal area, or tree species richness. Our best fitting models for nest-site selection showed higher understory and midstory cover as well as lower basal area and more canopy openness at nest sites when compared to available points within the surrounding territory. Nest-sites did not differ from surrounding territories in woody ground cover or tree species richness. Additionally, 84.77% of nests were placed in shade tolerant or intermediate species with witch hazel (Hamamelis virginiana), American beech (Fagus grandifolia), and maple (Acer spp.) saplings comprising the majority of host species. These results highlight the importance of areas within even aged oak stands undergoing uneven-aged processes such as density-independent mortality of canopy trees providing small amounts of light ideal for shade tolerant species recruitment. Territory selection understandably reflected the need for unimpeded access to the leaf litter by this ground foraging bird. Additionally, the availability of understory structure was important suggesting a consideration for suitable nest sites. Nest-site selection was primarily driven by the need for nesting substrate in the understory and midstory as well as structure consistent with natural openings in the canopy which provide light to facilitate shade tolerant understory and midstory growth. In the second chapter, we used our findings from chapter one to develop and test a silvicultural technique designed to cultivate shade tolerant understory and midstory structure in areas with little woody ground cover with a long-term goal of increasing the overall occupancy of wood thrush. We hypothesized that silvicultural techniques which mimic small, natural canopy gap formation might increase shade tolerant understory and midstory structure associated with nest-sites without compromising the overall high canopy closure requirements of wood thrush habitat. By increasing the availability of nesting substrate we hypothesized that we could increase the overall occupancy of stands already occupied by wood thrush. To test this novel silvicultural treatment, a long-term experiment was established with eight study stands, half of which received experimental canopy openings with all stands being surveyed annually by auditory point counts over the following 10 to 15 years for changes in wood thrush abundance in response to our small canopy gap treatments. In the winter of 2018/19 a total of 45 canopy openings were created across the experimental stands. In order to avoid the negative effects of high-grading, we selected medium diameter trees of low commercial value for removal. Vegetation was measured within these canopy openings and at points 50 meters away in the summer of 2020 in order to track the development of vegetation within the gaps compared to the surrounding forest matrix. These point count and vegetation surveys will be carried forward over the following decade to monitor the influence of this experimental silvicultural approach on occupancy levels of wood thrush and other forest birds.