Effects of manual, mechanical, and aerial herbicide conifer release on songbird numbers in regenerating spruce plantations in Northwestern Ontario
Abstract
This study examined the effects of conifer release with
herbicides [Vision® (glyphosate) ], [Release® (triclopyr) ] , and
proposed alternatives to herbicides with manual brush saws and
mechanical brushsaws, on breeding songbird densities in
regenerating spruce plantations in northwestern Ontario. Pre-treatment
(1993) cind post-treatment (1994) densities of songbirds
were determined by territory mapping during June. In July and
August of both years, birds were captured in mist nets and colour
banded to document reproductive success and to determine whether
resident birds continued to use these areas after treatment.
Transects were walked during August and September of both years
to identify species using the plantations.
Post-treatment data revealed no changes between years in
breeding bird species richness in the plantations.
Overall mean songbird density decreased non-significantly
from approximately 69 pairs per 10 ha in the pre-treatment year
to approximately 63 pairs per 10 ha in the first post-treatment
year.
Analysis of variance revealed significant decreases in mean
density of Chestnut-sided Warblers (Dendroica pensylvanica)
between the brushsaw and Silvana treatments and the controls in
the post-treatment year. Paired t-tests showed that, for most of
the common species, there were significant year to year increases or decreases in mean densities in most areas where
treatments were applied. Sparrow densities increased and the
densities of foliage gleaning insectivores decreased.
Ten percent of the 826 birds banded in 1993 were recaptured
in 1994, 80% of these were within 100m of the point of initial
capture the previous year. Twenty individuals moved from treated
areas into adjacent areas with more typical breeding habitat.
More White-throated Sparrows Zonotrichia albicollis than warblers
(Dendroica sp.) were observed utilizing the plantations during
August and September in the post-treatment year compared to the
pre-treatment year when there were no differences.
Clumps of untreated vegetation (skips) remaining within the
brushsaw and Silvana treatments provided the only available
nesting sites for Alder Flycatchers Empidonax alnorum, Chestnut-sided
Warblers, and Mourning Warblers Oporonis Philadelphia.
Conifer release treatments had non-significant impacts on
the breeding densities of most songbird species. Evidence
suggests, however, that treatment effects were masked by other
confounding factors such as the presence of skips, male site
tenacity, and too few degrees of freedom in the MANOVA analyses.
Collections
- Retrospective theses [1604]