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Article
The Effect of Cover and Food on Space Use by Wintering Song Sparrows and Field Sparrows
Canadian Journal of Zoology (1997)
  • Christopher W. Beck
  • Bryan Watts, The Center for Conservation Biology
Abstract
The distribution of birds among microhabitats may reflect species-specific resource requirements. Both food availability and predation risk have been shown to influence patterns of microhabitat use by sparrows during winter. We investigated the influence of vegetative cover and food on microhabitat use using a 2 × 2 factorial design. Both woody cover and food were manipulated at the plot level. The presence of screening cover (weed stems) was manipulated within plots. Sparrows showed a positive response to the presence of both cover and food. Within plots, sparrows selected areas with screening cover. The distribution of birds between areas with and without screening cover was influenced by the presence of woody cover and food. Conversely, the presence of screening cover reduced the influence of woody cover on the distribution of birds within patches. Song Sparrows (Melospiza melodia) and Field Sparrows (Spizella pusilla) differed in their response to treatments both within and across plots, suggesting that trade-offs between foraging and predation risk may be important in the structuring of winter sparrow assemblages. Additionally, screening cover appears to moderate predation risk and therefore to affect distribution patterns.
Disciplines
Publication Date
October, 1997
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1139/z97-790
Citation Information
Christopher W. Beck and Bryan Watts. "The Effect of Cover and Food on Space Use by Wintering Song Sparrows and Field Sparrows" Canadian Journal of Zoology Vol. 75 Iss. 10 (1997)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/bryan-watts/255/