Title

Multiscale Habitat Selection by Long-Billed Curlews (Numenius americanus) Breeding in the United States

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2010

Abstract

Long-billed Curlew (Numenius americanus) populations have declined during the past 150 years in part due to destruction and fragmentation of grasslands used during the breeding season. Here, multiscale habitat characteristics best predicting number of Long-billed Curlews, detected during range-wide surveys conducted throughout the United States in 2004 and 2005 were determined. Long-billed Curlews were most often observed in habitats classified primarily as grassland habitat and secondarily as shortgrass or pasture/rangeland, all with low vegetation heights (i.e. 4–15 cm). Numbers of Long-billed Curlews were positively associated with wetland habitats on a local scale and hay/pasture areas on a landscape scale, but negatively associated with shrub/scrub on local and landscape scales and evergreen forests on a landscape scale. The study confirmed the importance of grassland, cropland, pasture and wetland habitats for breeding Long-billed Curlews across its geographic range in the United States. These results reinforce the need to conserve, manage, or create contiguous tracts of grasslands containing emergent wetlands for Long-billed Curlews throughout the breeding season and their range in the United States.

Comments

Originally published in Waterbirds, 33(2):148-161 by The Waterbird Society

SFA authenticated users may access the full text at: http://www.bioone.org/doi/full/10.1675/063.033.0203

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1675/063.033.0203


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