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Population increase in Kirtland's warbler and summer range expansion to Wisconsin and Michigan's Upper Peninsula, USA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2003

Deahn M. Donner
Affiliation:
United States Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Research Station, 5985 Highway K, Rhinelander, WI 54501, USA
Carol I. Bocetti
Affiliation:
United States Geological Survey, Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, California University of Pennsylvania, 250 University Avenue, Box 45, California, PA 15419, USA
Steve Sjogren
Affiliation:
United States Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Hiawatha National Forest, St. Ignace District, St. Ignace, MI 49781, USA
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Abstract

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The threatened Kirtland's warbler Dendroica kirtlandii breeds in stands of young jack pine Pinus banksiana growing on well-drained soils in Michigan, USA. We summarize information documenting the range expansion of Kirtland's warbler due to increased habitat management in the core breeding range in the Lower Peninsula of Michigan during 1990–2000. We collected records and conducted searches for the species in Michigan's Upper Peninsula and Wisconsin over 1978–2000. During that time 25 males were found in Wisconsin and 90 males in the Upper Peninsula. We documented colonization of Michigan's Upper Peninsula by six ringed males from the Lower Peninsula of Michigan. Four ringed birds also moved back to the core breeding range, including two males that made two-way movements between the core breeding range and the Upper Peninsula. Thirty-seven females were observed with males from 1995 to 2000, all in Michigan. Nesting activities were noted for 25 pairs and at least nine nests fledged young. One male ringed as a fledgling returned to breed in two subsequent years. After a 19-year period of population stability, the Kirtland's warbler population increased four-fold during 1990–2000, most likely in response to a tripling in habitat area. This increase in sightings and documented breeding may be related to habitat availability in Michigan's Upper Peninsula and to saturation of habitat in the main breeding range. The increase in extra-limital records during 1995–1999 corresponds to the time when the population went from the minimum to the maximum projected population densities, and a decline in natural wildfire habitat was just offset by new managed habitat for the Kirtland's warbler.

Type
Articles
Copyright
2003 Fauna & Flora International