Resource selection by GPS-tagged California spotted owls in mixed-ownership forests

•We studied habitat selection of GPS-tagged California spotted owls in mixed-ownership forests.•Spotted owls selected forests with intermediate- to larger-sized trees with canopy > 50%for foraging.•Cover type explained habitat selection better than landownership type.•Privately-owned lands harbor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Forest ecology and management 2019-02, Vol.433, p.295-304
Hauptverfasser: Atuo, Fidelis A., Roberts, Kevin, Whitmore, Sheila, Dotters, Brian P., Raphael, Martin G., Sawyer, Sarah C., Keane, John J., Gutiérrez, R.J., Zachariah Peery, M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We studied habitat selection of GPS-tagged California spotted owls in mixed-ownership forests.•Spotted owls selected forests with intermediate- to larger-sized trees with canopy > 50%for foraging.•Cover type explained habitat selection better than landownership type.•Privately-owned lands harbored more suitable spotted owl habitat than previously recognized.•Collaborative research can benefit conservation in mixed-ownership landscapes. The relative contribution of private and public forest to the conservation of species in mixed-ownership landscapes has often been contentious because management goals vary among owners. This tension can be exacerbated by a lack of understanding about how wildlife use habitats managed by different landowners and the relative value of habitats in having different structures, configurations, and management histories. To address this knowledge gap and enhance science-based conservation planning among different ownerships, we analyzed habitat selection by 53 GPS-tagged California spotted owls across multiple temporal scales within mixed-ownership landscapes in the Sierra Nevada. At a fine temporal scale, step-selection function analysis of hourly locations collected by GPS tags suggested that foraging spotted owls selected closed-canopy, larger-tree forest (Quadratic Mean Diameter [QMD] ≥ 33 cm, canopy cover ≥ 60%). Point selection function (PSF) analysis based on single nightly locations suggested that spotted owls selected a broader range of forest conditions including selection of forests having intermediate sized trees and intermediate canopy cover (QMD 28–33 cm, canopy cover ≥ 50%), and the strength of selection for these forest conditions increased in the less frequently used areas of home ranges. The PSF also suggested that spotted owls selected areas with relatively high cover type heterogeneity that included a mix of seral stages, except in the core of their home range where they selected relatively spatially homogenous forests characterized by large trees and closed canopy. Spotted owl home ranges increased in size with increasing elevation and cover type heterogeneity, and decreased in size with forest characterized by intermediate-sized trees. Collectively, these results indicate that landscapes having forest patches characterized by either intermediate or large-sized trees, both with high canopy cover, likely constitute the important foraging habitat for California spotted owls in Sierra Nevada mixed conifer forest
ISSN:0378-1127
1872-7042
DOI:10.1016/j.foreco.2018.11.011