Site occupancy and reproductive dynamics of California spotted owls in a mixed-ownership landscape

•We studied California spotted owl demography in mixed-ownership landscapes.•Forest conditions and topography better-explained variation in data than ownership.•Occupancy and reproduction were higher in study areas with more private lands.•Differences between study areas due to elevation and young f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Forest ecology and management 2019-04, Vol.437, p.188-200
Hauptverfasser: Hobart, Brendan K., Roberts, Kevin N., Dotters, Brian P., Berigan, William J., Whitmore, Sheila A., Raphael, Martin G., Keane, John J., Gutiérrez, R.J., Peery, M. Zachariah
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We studied California spotted owl demography in mixed-ownership landscapes.•Forest conditions and topography better-explained variation in data than ownership.•Occupancy and reproduction were higher in study areas with more private lands.•Differences between study areas due to elevation and young forest with hardwoods.•Including private lands in conservation research provides valuable insights. Biodiversity conservation in mixed-ownership landscapes often depends on contributions from privately-owned lands, where natural resource development can alter and produce novel habitat conditions for species of conservation concern. A lack of research on private lands stemming from access issues and concerns over regulatory outcomes, however, often limits evaluation of the impact of land management. The California spotted owl (Strix occidentalis occidentalis), for example, often occurs in mixed-ownership landscapes but research on this species has occurred primarily on public lands. Therefore, we conducted the first large-scale private-public cooperative and comparative analyses of California spotted owls inhabiting mixed-ownership landscapes in the Sierra Nevada, California, USA. We surveyed 151 spotted owl sites from 2013 to 2017 within two study systems: one comprised primarily of public lands (national forests) where the owl population has declined over the last ∼20 years and a set of study areas comprised mostly of private lands on which relatively high estimates of site occupancy were recently reported. Multistate occupancy modeling indicated that the probability of occupancy and successful reproduction by owls depended on site status in the previous year, with both probabilities highest at sites where owls successfully reproduced in the previous year, intermediate at occupied sites where owls had not successfully reproduced, and lowest at previously unoccupied sites. Site occupancy probability was higher at low-elevation sites and lower at sites that contained more open area and younger forest. Successful reproduction by owls was also more likely at low-elevation sites and at sites with more north-facing slope and younger forest with high basal area of hardwoods. Study areas with more private lands tended to occur at lower elevations and have greater amounts of younger forest with high basal area of hardwoods, which may have contributed to higher occupancy and reproductive probabilities than the study area with more public land. Thus, differences in occupan
ISSN:0378-1127
1872-7042
DOI:10.1016/j.foreco.2019.01.028