Parasitism at the landscape scale: Cowbirds prefer forests
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Abstract
Landscape-scale examination of parasitism patterns of Brown-headed Cowbirds (Molothrus ater) revealed heterogeneous parasitism rates across the mosaic of a forest and associated old-field communities. In a two year study in Dutchess County, New York, we found a significantly higher parasitism rate in the forest-interior community (n = 301 nests; 17 species) than on the species in the adjacent and nearby old field and edge (n = 328 nests; 15 species; 32.3% versus 6.5%; p < 0.0001). Cowbirds invaded a mature 1300-ha forest stand even when their traditional host species were available in adjacent old-field and edge habitats. The forest and old-field study areas were located in a 38,000-ha township with 55% forest cover and contained numerous agriculture, dairy, and horse farms that provided favorable habitat for cowbirds. Within-forest examination of parasitism patterns revealed four aspects of cowbird parasitism that contrasted with patterns described in other regions: (1) parasitism was concentrated significantly more often on ground- and low-nesting (nests ≤ 1 m) forest species than on medium- and high-nesting species (nests> 1 m; 35.01% versus 29.93%; p = 0.0393); (2) parasitism was not significantly greater on Neotropical migrant species than on short-distance migrants and residents; (3) the parasitism rate was not higher in nests close to edges; and (4) the parasitism level was low on certain forest species (such as Wood Thrush) that have experienced high parasitism levels in the Midwest. From a management perspective these data suggest that cowbirds exhibit regional differences in host and habitat use; the target host community of a particular cowbird population is unpredictable at the landscape scale; and a landscape scale should be used in designing cowbird studies to accurately assess local population dynamics.
Study Area
Publication type | Article |
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Publication Subtype | Journal Article |
Title | Parasitism at the landscape scale: Cowbirds prefer forests |
Series title | Conservation Biology |
DOI | 10.1046/j.1523-1739.1995.09061415.x |
Volume | 9 |
Issue | 6 |
Publication Date | January 19, 2002 |
Year Published | 1995 |
Language | English |
Publisher | Wiley |
Contributing office(s) | Patuxent Wildlife Research Center |
Description | 10 p. |
First page | 1415 |
Last page | 1424 |
Country | United States |
State | New York |
County | Dutchess County |