Renesting by dusky Canada geese on the Copper River Delta, Alaska
Authored by Thomas F Fondell, James B Grand, David A Miller, R Michael Anthony
Date Published: 2006
DOI: 10.2193/0022-541x(2006)70[955:rbdcgo]2.0.co;2
Sponsors:
Alaska Science Center
United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS or FWS)
Platforms:
MARK
Model Documentation:
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Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
The population of dusky Canada geese (Branta canadensis occidentalis;
hereafter duskies) breeding on the Copper River Delta (CRD), Alaska, USA, has been in long-term decline, largely as a result of reduced
productivity, Estimates of renesting rates by duskies may be useful for
adjusting estimates of the size of the breeding population derived from
aerial surveys and for understanding population dynamics. We used a
marked population of dusky females to obtain estimates of renesting
propensity and renesting interval on the CPD, 1999-2000. Continuation
nests, replacement nests initiated without a break in the laying
sequence, resulted only after first nests were destroyed in the laying
stage with 4 eggs laid. Renesting propensity declined with nest age from
72\% in mid-laying to 30\% in early incubation. Between first nests and
renests, mean interval was 11.9 +/- 0.6 days, mean distance was 74.5 m
(range 0-214 m), and clutch size declined 0.9 +/- 0.4 eggs. We
incorporated our renesting estimates and available estimates of other
nesting parameters into an individual-based model to predict the
proportion of first nests, continuation nests, and renests, and to
examine female success on the CRD, 1997-2000. Our model predicted that
19-36\% of nests each year were continuation nests and renests. Also, through 15 May (the approx. date of breeding ground surveys), 1.1-1.3
nests were initiated per female. Thus, the number of nests per female
would have a significant, though relatively consistent, effect on
adjusting the relation between numbers of nests found on ground surveys
versus numbers of birds seen during aerial surveys. We also suggest a
method that managers could use to predict nests per female using nest
success of early nests. Our model predicted that relative to observed
estimates of nest success, female success was 32-100\% greater, due to
replacement nests. Thus, although nest success remains low, production
for duskies was higher than previously thought. For dusky Canada geese, managers need to consider both continuation nests and renests in
designing surveys and in calculating adjustment factors for the
expansion of aerial survey data using nest densities.
Tags
growth
Success
Reproduction
Phenology
Mallards
Clutch-size
Snow geese
Branta-canadensis-occidentalis
Nest survival