2014
DOI: 10.5751/ace-00671-090203
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Occurrence patterns of Black-backed Woodpeckers in green forest of the Sierra Nevada Mountains, California, USA.

Abstract: ABSTRACT. Black-backed Woodpeckers (Picoides arcticus) are a rare habitat specialist typically found in moderate and high severity burned forest throughout its range. It also inhabits green forest but little is known about occurrence and habitat use patterns outside of burned areas, especially in the Sierra Nevada of California, USA. We used point count and playback surveys to detect Black-backed Woodpeckers during 2011 -2013 on 460 transects on 10 national forest units. We defined green forest as areas that h… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…We considered a multiyear dynamic model that assumes the population is demographically closed within each year (e.g., see dynamics models for woodpeckers in Fogg et al 2014). The number of distinct woodpeckers counted at point i in year j and occasion t (n ijt ) was modeled as an independent realization of a Binomial random variable dependent on the actual number of woodpeckers at point i in year j (N ij ) and the detection probability at t (p ijt ), such that n ij ~ Binomial(N ij , p ijt ) with mean pN.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…We considered a multiyear dynamic model that assumes the population is demographically closed within each year (e.g., see dynamics models for woodpeckers in Fogg et al 2014). The number of distinct woodpeckers counted at point i in year j and occasion t (n ijt ) was modeled as an independent realization of a Binomial random variable dependent on the actual number of woodpeckers at point i in year j (N ij ) and the detection probability at t (p ijt ), such that n ij ~ Binomial(N ij , p ijt ) with mean pN.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The DD is a wooden box used with drum sticks to imitate the double-tap territorial drum that Magellanic Woodpeckers and other campephiline species make while patrolling their territories . It produces a sound that is comparable to that broadcasted during playback surveys, but that is louder and more resonant than sound played from an electronic device (Saracco et al 2011, Fogg et al 2014. Abundance estimates derived from active surveys should be greater than those from passive surveys (without using the DD), being reflected by differences in detection probability between census techniques (see the Data analysis section).…”
Section: Abundance Surveysmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Subadults and adults were grouped into one category to avoid issues of misclassification (Matthews andMiaud 2007, Matthews andPreisler 2010). We employed the stacking method where each lake season is considered a site sensu Fogg et al 2014 andAhlering andMerkord 2016. This approach assumes independence of abundance within a lake between years. These models are hierarchical and are composed of two submodels, one estimating abundance and the other estimating rates of detection.…”
Section: Abundance Modelingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although Black-backed Woodpeckers typically build nests in forests that burn at high severity Dudley 1998, Hutto 2006), they are also known to use green areas (Tremblay et al 2009, Fogg et al 2014), so we searched the full spectrum of burn conditions. We selected a stratified random sample of survey points from this grid and augmented the sample with 11 additional survey points on lands managed by the California Tahoe Conservancy (CTC) to increase representation of available landscape conditions.…”
Section: Nest Searchingmentioning
confidence: 99%