February 1988 Vol. 33, No. 1

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

February 1988 Vol. 33, No. 1 NEWSLETTER Vol. 33, No. 1 February, 1988 Animal Behavior Society A quarterly publication 'DarN! Cliiszar, ~'BS Secretary :Department ofPsy:fwfoay, 'Unifltrsity ofCoWrru4I, Campus 'B()~345, 'Bou1tfer, CoWrru4I, 80309 ABS NATIONAL CONVENTION. 1988 2nd PRESIDENT-ELECT: Patrick Colgan, Biology Dept, Queen's Univ Halifax, Nova Scotia Canada B3H 411 To be held at the University of Montana, Missoula, MT., 7-13 PAST-PRESIDENT: Gordon Burghardt, Dept of Psych. Aug 1988. Deadline for abstracts and transmittal forms is 25 Univ of Tennessee Knoxville TN 37916 March 1988. These materials (see November Newsletter) SECRETARY: (1987-1990) David Chiszar, Dept Psych, should be sent to ABS Program Officer, Susan E. Riechert, Univ of Colorado Boulder CO 80309 Bioi Dept, Univ Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996. In TREASURER: (1985-88) H. Jane Brockmann, Dept accordance with the practices of other societies, ABS now Zoology, Univ of Florida Gainesville FL 32611 requires that individuals pre-register at the time of submitting PROGRAM OFFICER: (1986-89) Susan Riechert, Dept an Abstract. (persons not submitting abstracts may register by Zoology, Univ of Tennessee Knoxville, TN 37916 June 10 without penalty.) See November Newsletter for PARLIAMENTARIAN: (1986-89) Edward H. Burtt, Jr., registration form. Dept ZOOlogy, Ohio Wesleyan Univ Delaware OH 43015 EDITOR: (1985-88) Charles Snowdon, Dept ANIMAL BEHAVIOR SOCIETY DIRECTION OF Psychology, Univ of Wisconsin Madison WI 53706 CORRESPONDENCE MEMBER-AT-LARGE: (1985-88) Gail Michener, Dept Bioi Sci, Univ of Lethbridge Lethbridge, Alberta, ABS NEWSLETTER & general correspondence to the Canada IlK 3M4 Society: MEMBER-AT-LARGE: (1986-89) Jan Randall, BioI Dept, David Chiszar, Dept of Psych, Campus Box 345. San Francisco State Univ San Francisco CA 94132 Univ of Colorado, Boulder CO 80309 MEMBER-AT-LARGE: (1987-90) Julia Chase, BioI Dept, ANIMAL BEHA VIOUR--Manuscripts and editorial matters: Barnard College Columbia Univ, New York NY 10027 Charles Snowdon, Dept of Psychology. Univ of Wisconsin. Madison WI 53706 ABS STATEMENT OF CASH RECEIPTS AND ANIMAL BEHA VIOUR--Missing, defective, or back issues; DISBURSEMENTS changes of address: 1 JULY 1986 TO 30 JUNE 1987 H. Jane Brockmann, Dept of Zoology, Univ of Florida, Gainesville FL 32611 BEGINNING BALANCE First City Bank, Gainesville, FL PRINTING COSIS Checking account ..................... $ 12,586 Money Management account.. ... $ 13,146 The last newsletter used newsprint at a considerable saving to F10qda Federal Savings and Loan ABS. and I received about thirty comments on this decision. Association. Gainesville. FL ­ Only four of these were negative. Accordingly, I will continue Certificate of Deposit............. $ 69.618 to use newsprint-oat least until the 1988 meeting when I1l have Empire of American Savings Bank, a chance to hear from more of you. Don't hesitate to drop me a Gainesville, FL ­ note about your feelings in this matter. My printer is trying to Certificate of Deposit...... ........ $ 27,906 acquire better grades of paper that will still give ABS a Editor's Fund (cash)................... $ - 160 considerable savings. Accordingly, I will make every attempt Secretary's Fund (cash)............... $ 0 to use the best quality paper that my budget will allow. TOTAL BEGINNING BALANCE $123,096 Incidentally, savings in this area will permit us to upgrade the postage on newsletters for foreign members. REVENUE RECEIVED Membership Dues ABS OFFICERS Regular................................. $ 53,400 Student and emeritus ................ $ 14,360 PRESIDENT: Sydney Gauthreaux, Jr., Dept of Zoology, Spouse. ....... .................... ...... $ 667 Clemson Univ Clemson, SC 29631 Subscriptions to Publications 1st PRESIDENT-ELECT: John Fentress, Depts of Journal. ................................. $ 1,116 Psychology. and Biology, Dalhousie Univ Halifax, Newsletter .............................. $ 7 Nova Scoua B3H 4J 1 Canada Interest .................................... $ 10,012 Late Fees ................................. $ 2,168 Mailing Labels ......................... $ 1,434 1 Graduate Programs in profitable. Lakeside Lab is in northwestern Iowa on recent Behavior Pamphlet ................. $ 417 glacial terrain, with adjacent lakes, wetlands, virgin prairie, Film Lists ............................... $ 43 prairie rivers, and pockets of forest. The lakes country is Advertisements in Annual continuous to the north and the Great Plains to the west. Our Meeting Program ........ ...... ..... $ 200 own 55 ha grounds border large and deep West Okoboji Lake, Donation from ASAB we have forest and manipulable grassland. Conditions: rustic for Editorial Office ..... ..... .... ... $ 1,000 but not primitive, an air of relaxed intensity, food unbelievable. Other Misc. Donations .............. $ 40 Research labs are relatively new and we have a small library. Reim bursement from IEC Interested applicants should write the director for more about to Secretary........................... $ 350 the area and facilities: Dr. Richard V. Bovbjerg. Director, Dept Return from NCSU BioI, Univ of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242. Application will Annual Meeting ...... .......... ..... S 138 contain cover letter, vitae, and a I or 2 page synopsis of TOTAL REVENUE RECEIVED $ 85.352 proposed project. Specific reasons why our station is so suitable are critical to the application. Two letters arc TOTAL FUNDS A V AILABLE $208,448 requested, including one from the research sponsor. Applications will be considered up to 1 April 1988. EXPENDITURES ASAB for Journal GRADUATE STUDENT FELLOWSHIPS- Fall 1988. Animal Behaviour ................... $ 33,670 Through a grant from the Louisiana Education Quality Support First President Elect Fund, three fellowships for outstanding graduate students will (Founder's Award) ................... $ 0 be offered. Fellowships include a waiver of tuition and fees and Second President Elect a stipend of $12,000/yr, renewable over 4 years. Renewal will (Allee Award) ........................ $ 250 be dependent upon progress in graduate study, especially in Secretary Christianson ................ $ 5,727 research. Teaching Assistantships of $5,200 to $7,200 plus Secretary Chiszar ...................... $ 1,299 tuition scholarships are also available to qualified applicants. Treasurer .................................. $ 9,590 Criteria for consideration for support include GRE scores, GPA Editor of Animal Behaviour ......... $ 23,546 (overall and in psychology), and other factors including Program Officer ........................ $ 3,498 demonstrated research commitment and skill. We are Member-at-Large (research grants). $ 200 particularly interested in reaching members of underreprcscnted Education Committee ................. $ 194 groups. Doctoral Programs in research specialize in ANIMAL Film Committee ....................... $ 469 BEHA VIOR, Cognition, Developmental Psychology, Animal Care CommiHee ............. $ 0 Learning, Physiological Psychology, Sensory, Social Membership Committee ............. $ 354 Psychology, and StatisticslExperimental Design. Doctoral AIBS Dues ............. ...... ....... ..... $ 1,063 Programs in IndustriaVOrganizational Psychology and School TOTAL EXPENDITURES $ 79,860 Psychology are also offered, as well as Master's level programs in Applied Psychological Research and (in collaboration with ENDING BALANCE the Department of Education) Early Childhood Education. For First City Bank, Gainesville, FL more information and application forms call or write: Dr. C. Checking account .................. ~, 1,026 Chrisman Wilson, Chair, Department of Psychology, Tulane Money Management account .... $ 23,730 University, New Orleans, LA 70118. Phone (504) 865-5331. Florida Federal Savings and Loan Association, Gainesville, FL ­ POSTDOCTORAL TRAINEESHIPS IN ETHOLOGY - I Sept Certificate of Deposit .............. $ 73,750 1988. NIH graduate Program traineeships at the University of Empire of America Savings Bank, Tennessee. Trainees are expected to establish a research Gainesville, FL ­ program in human or nonhuman ethology focusing on Certificate of Deposit .............. $ 29,954 communication (development, genetics, or physiology), A list Editor's Fund (cash) ................... $ - 5,027 of faculty, current research interests, and application guidelines Secretary Chiszar's Fund (cash) .... $ 5,000 are available upon request. Application deadline is I March Education Committee Fund 1988. Direct inquiries to: Dr. Richard Sa'1dargas, Ethology (Matthews) ........................... S 155 Selection Committee, Department of Psychology, Univ of TOTAL ENDING BALANCE $128,588 Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996. RESEARCH ASSISTANTS- Spring and Summer 1988. Two OPPORTUNITIES positions are available for undergraduate students to participate in research concerned with mate choice, intraspecific LABORATORY FELLOWSHIPS- Summer, 1988. competition, and kin recognition in frogs and toads. Research Announcing the Founder's Fellowship in field studies for pre­ is carried out in Cambridge and at 2 field sites in Massachusetts doctoral students--a summer at The Iowa Lakeside Laboratory. and New York, and affords an excellent opportunity to learn The stipend is $2,000, tuition free; fel1o',vs pay modest fees for field methods as well as an introduction to the use of molecular room/board and lab space. Fellowships honor founder, Thomas techniques for studying problems in behavioral ecology. Salary H. Macbride. Applicants will be doctoral candidates at the level provided and
Recommended publications
  • Nest-Site Selection by Western Screech-Owls in the Sonoran Desert, Arizona
    Western North American Naturalist Volume 63 Number 4 Article 16 12-3-2003 Nest-site selection by Western Screech-Owls in the Sonoran Desert, Arizona Paul C. Hardy University of Arizona, Tucson Michael L. Morrison University of California, Bishop Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/wnan Recommended Citation Hardy, Paul C. and Morrison, Michael L. (2003) "Nest-site selection by Western Screech-Owls in the Sonoran Desert, Arizona," Western North American Naturalist: Vol. 63 : No. 4 , Article 16. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/wnan/vol63/iss4/16 This Note is brought to you for free and open access by the Western North American Naturalist Publications at BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Western North American Naturalist by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Western North American Naturalist 63(4), ©2003, pp. 533-537 NEST~SITE SELECTION BY WESTERN SCREECH~OWLS IN THE SONORAN DESERT, ARIZONA Paul C. Hardyl,2 and Michael L. Morrison3 Key words: Gila Woodpecker, Gilded Flicker, nest-site selection, Otus kennicottii, saguaro cacti, Sonoran Desert, West­ ern Screech~Owl. The Western ScreecbOwl (Otus kennicottii) valley includes the creosote (Larrea triden­ is a small, nocturnal, secondary caVity-nesting tata)~white bursage (Ambrosia dumosa) series, bird that is a year-round resident throughout and in runnels and washes, the mixed-scrub much of western North America and Mexico series (Turner and Brown 1994). Temperatures (Marshall 1957, Phillips et al. 1964, AOU 1983, for the Arizona Upland and Lower Colorado Johnsgard 1988, Cannings and Angell 2001).
    [Show full text]
  • Landbird Monitoring in the Sonoran Desert Network 2012 Annual Report
    National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Natural Resource Stewardship and Science Landbird Monitoring in the Sonoran Desert Network 2012 Annual Report Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/SODN/NRTR—2013/744 ON THE COVER Hooded Oriole (Icterus cucullatus). Photo by Moez Ali. Landbird Monitoring in the Sonoran Desert Network 2012 Annual Report Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/SODN/NRTR—2013/744 Authors Moez Ali Rocky Mountain Bird Observatory 230 Cherry Street, Suite 150 Fort Collins, Colorado 80521 Kristen Beaupré National Park Service Sonoran Desert Network 7660 E. Broadway Blvd, Suite 303 Tucson, Arizona 85710 Patricia Valentine-Darby University of West Florida Department of Biology 11000 University Parkway Pensacola, Florida 32514 Chris White Rocky Mountain Bird Observatory 230 Cherry Street, Suite 150 Fort Collins, Colorado 80521 Project Contact Robert E. Bennetts National Park Service Southern Plains Network Capulin Volcano National Monument PO Box 40 Des Moines, New Mexico 88418 May 2013 U.S. Department of the Interior National Park Service Natural Resource Stewardship and Science Fort Collins, Colorado The National Park Service, Natural Resource Stewardship and Science office in Fort Collins, Colora- do, publishes a range of reports that address natural resource topics. These reports are of interest and applicability to a broad audience in the National Park Service and others in natural resource manage- ment, including scientists, conservation and environmental constituencies, and the public. The Natural Resource Technical Report Series is used to disseminate results of scientific studies in the physical, biological, and social sciences for both the advancement of science and the achievement of the National Park Service mission.
    [Show full text]
  • Gilded Flicker (Colaptes Chrysoides) (GIFL) Basic Conceptual Ecological Model for the Lower Colorado River
    Gilded Flicker (Colaptes chrysoides) (GIFL) Basic Conceptual Ecological Model for the Lower Colorado River Photo courtesy of Curtis Marantz June 2015 Lower Colorado River Multi-Species Conservation Program Steering Committee Members Federal Participant Group California Participant Group Bureau of Reclamation California Department of Fish and Wildlife U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service City of Needles National Park Service Coachella Valley Water District Bureau of Land Management Colorado River Board of California Bureau of Indian Affairs Bard Water District Western Area Power Administration Imperial Irrigation District Los Angeles Department of Water and Power Palo Verde Irrigation District Arizona Participant Group San Diego County Water Authority Southern California Edison Company Arizona Department of Water Resources Southern California Public Power Authority Arizona Electric Power Cooperative, Inc. The Metropolitan Water District of Southern Arizona Game and Fish Department California Arizona Power Authority Central Arizona Water Conservation District Cibola Valley Irrigation and Drainage District Nevada Participant Group City of Bullhead City City of Lake Havasu City Colorado River Commission of Nevada City of Mesa Nevada Department of Wildlife City of Somerton Southern Nevada Water Authority City of Yuma Colorado River Commission Power Users Electrical District No. 3, Pinal County, Arizona Basic Water Company Golden Shores Water Conservation District Mohave County Water Authority Mohave Valley Irrigation and Drainage District Native American Participant Group Mohave Water Conservation District North Gila Valley Irrigation and Drainage District Hualapai Tribe Town of Fredonia Colorado River Indian Tribes Town of Thatcher Chemehuevi Indian Tribe Town of Wickenburg Salt River Project Agricultural Improvement and Power District Unit “B” Irrigation and Drainage District Conservation Participant Group Wellton-Mohawk Irrigation and Drainage District Yuma County Water Users’ Association Ducks Unlimited Yuma Irrigation District Lower Colorado River RC&D Area, Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • Conceptual Models for Golden Eagle, Costa's Hummingbird, Loggerhead
    Conceptual Models for Golden Eagle, Costa’s Hummingbird, Loggerhead Shrike, and Gilded Flicker (Clark County # CBE 2011‐GBBO‐901A) Prepared by: Great Basin Bird Observatory 1755 E. Plumb Lane #256 Reno, NV 89502 Submitted to: Clark County Government Center Desert Conservation Program 500 Grand Central Parkway Las Vegas, NV 89106 4 February 2015 Contents Introduction .................................................................................................................................................. 2 Golden Eagle ................................................................................................................................................. 2 Costa’s Hummingbird .................................................................................................................................... 2 Loggerhead Shrike......................................................................................................................................... 3 Gilded Flicker ................................................................................................................................................ 3 Literature Cited ............................................................................................................................................. 4 GBBO Report on Conceptual Models 2/2/2015 Page 1 Introduction As part of the contract for predictive modeling for four Clark County bird species, the Great Basin Bird Observatory (GBBO) developed conceptual models for the species Golden Eagle, Costa’s
    [Show full text]
  • De Novoassembly of a Chromosome-Scale Reference Genome
    DE NOVO ASSEMBLY OF A CHROMOSOME-SCALE REFERENCE GENOME FOR THE NORTHERN FLICKER COLAPTES AURATUS The Texas Tech community has made this publication openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters to us. Citation Jack P Hruska, Joseph D Manthey, De novo assembly of a chromosome-scale reference genome for the northern flicker Colaptes auratus, G3 Genes|Genomes|Genetics, Volume 11, Issue 1, January 2021, jkaa026, https://doi.org/10.1093/g3journal/jkaa026 Citable Link https://hdl.handle.net/2346/87602 Terms of Use CC BY 4.0 Title page template design credit to Harvard DASH. 2 G3, 2021, 11(1), jkaa026 DOI: 10.1093/g3journal/jkaa026 Advance Access Publication Date: 9 December 2020 Genome Report De novo assembly of a chromosome-scale reference genome for the northern flicker Colaptes auratus Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/g3journal/article/11/1/jkaa026/6028989 by Texas Tech Univ. Libraries user on 09 August 2021 Jack P. Hruska * and Joseph D. Manthey Department of Biological Sciences, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX 79409-43131, USA *Corresponding author: Department of Biological Sciences, Texas Tech University, 2901 Main Street, Lubbock, TX 79409-43131, USA. [email protected] Abstract Thenorthernflicker,Colaptes auratus, is a widely distributed North American woodpecker and a long-standing focal species for the study of ecology, behavior, phenotypic differentiation, and hybridization. We present here a highly contiguous de novo genome assembly of C. auratus, the first such assembly for the species and the first published chromosome-level assembly for woodpeckers (Picidae). The as- sembly was generated using a combination of short-read Chromium 10Â and long-read PacBio sequencing, and further scaffolded with chromatin conformation capture (Hi-C) reads.
    [Show full text]
  • January-February 2006
    New Hope Audubon Society Newsletter Volume 32, Number 1: January-February 2006 Weymouth Woods and Sandhills Game Reserve Field Trip Tom Driscoll and Patrick Coin On October 15, 2005, Marty Girolami, Chad Schoen, Collier shutout again. We Durovitch, and Tom Driscoll went on a field to Weymouth did see a possible Woods State Park, near Southern Pines. There we met Patrick Bachmann’s Sparrow, Coin. We also got there in time to go on a scheduled bird but we couldn’t get walk with Park Ranger Scott Heartley. good looks at it. We also saw a Our target birds were the Red-cockaded Woodpecker and Loggerhead Shrike Bachmann’s Sparrow. Both species prefer pine forests that are which was a life bird regularly burned. Spirits were high as we heard the Red- for some. We saw cockaded Woodpecker from the parking lot as we started. first of the season White-throated Sparrow and Golden- However, we did not see either of the target birds at crowned Kinglet, as well. Sunny warm weather starting at Weymouth Woods. We did see several woodpeckers (Pileated, about noon brought out a good crop of butterflies, mostly Downy, and Hairy), however, including a “first-of-the-season” nectaring on Chaffhead, Carphephorus. This light purple Yellow-bellied Sapsucker. We also saw a first-of-the-season flower was found everywhere...it resembles the more familiar Ruby-crowned Kinglet. Other birds seen included many Blazing Star, Liatris. Several Monarchs were seen, as well as Common Grackles, a late Scarlet Tanager, and a Blue-headed beautiful, but worn, Gulf Fritillaries.
    [Show full text]
  • LCR MSCP Species Accounts, 2008
    Lower Colorado River Multi-Species Conservation Program Steering Committee Members Federal Participant Group California Participant Group Bureau of Reclamation California Department of Fish and Game U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service City of Needles National Park Service Coachella Valley Water District Bureau of Land Management Colorado River Board of California Bureau of Indian Affairs Bard Water District Western Area Power Administration Imperial Irrigation District Los Angeles Department of Water and Power Palo Verde Irrigation District Arizona Participant Group San Diego County Water Authority Southern California Edison Company Arizona Department of Water Resources Southern California Public Power Authority Arizona Electric Power Cooperative, Inc. The Metropolitan Water District of Southern Arizona Game and Fish Department California Arizona Power Authority Central Arizona Water Conservation District Cibola Valley Irrigation and Drainage District Nevada Participant Group City of Bullhead City City of Lake Havasu City Colorado River Commission of Nevada City of Mesa Nevada Department of Wildlife City of Somerton Southern Nevada Water Authority City of Yuma Colorado River Commission Power Users Electrical District No. 3, Pinal County, Arizona Basic Water Company Golden Shores Water Conservation District Mohave County Water Authority Mohave Valley Irrigation and Drainage District Native American Participant Group Mohave Water Conservation District North Gila Valley Irrigation and Drainage District Hualapai Tribe Town of Fredonia Colorado River Indian Tribes Town of Thatcher The Cocopah Indian Tribe Town of Wickenburg Salt River Project Agricultural Improvement and Power District Unit “B” Irrigation and Drainage District Conservation Participant Group Wellton-Mohawk Irrigation and Drainage District Yuma County Water Users’ Association Ducks Unlimited Yuma Irrigation District Lower Colorado River RC&D Area, Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • Fire and Birds in the Southwestern United States
    Sludies in Avian Biology No . 30:I-XXX FIRE AND BIRDS IN THE SOUTHWESTERN UNITED STATES CARL E. BOCK AND WILLIAM M. BLOCK Absrracr. Fire is an imponant ecological force in many southwestern ecosystems, but frequ encies, sizes, and intensities of fire have been altered historically by' grazing, logging, exotic vegetation, and suppression. Prescribed burning should be applied widely, but under experimental conditions that facilitate studying its impacts on birds and other components of biodiversity. Exceptions are Sonoran, Mojave, and Chihuahuan desert scrub, and riparian woodlands, where the increased fuel loads caused by invasions of exotic grasses and trees ha ve increased Ihe frequency and intensity of wildfires that now are generally destructive 10 native vegetation. Fire once played a critical role in maintaining a balance between herbaceous and woody vegetation in desert grasslands, and in providing a shon-term stimulus to forb and seed production. A 3-5 yr fire -return interval likely will sUS!<lin most desen grassland birds, but large areas should remain unburned to serve spe­ cies dependent upon woody vegetalion. Understory fire once mainlained relatively open oak sava nna, pinyon­ juniper, pine-oak, ponderosa pine (Pil1us ponderosa), and low elevation mixed-conifer forests and their bird assemblages, but current fuel conditions are more likely to result in stand-replacement fires outside the range of natural variation. Prescribed burning, thinning, and grazing management will be needed to return fire to its prehi storic role in these habitats. Fire also should be applied in high elevation mixed-conifer forests, especially to increase aspen stands that are importanl for many birds, but this will be an especially difficult challenge in an ecosystem where stand-replacement fire s are nalUral events.
    [Show full text]
  • Species Risk Assessment
    Ecological Sustainability Analysis of the Kaibab National Forest: Species Diversity Report Ver. 1.2 Prepared by: Mikele Painter and Valerie Stein Foster Kaibab National Forest For: Kaibab National Forest Plan Revision Analysis 22 December 2008 SpeciesDiversity-Report-ver-1.2.doc 22 December 2008 Table of Contents Table of Contents............................................................................................................................. i Introduction..................................................................................................................................... 1 PART I: Species Diversity.............................................................................................................. 1 Species List ................................................................................................................................. 1 Criteria .................................................................................................................................... 2 Assessment Sources................................................................................................................ 3 Screening Results.................................................................................................................... 4 Habitat Associations and Initial Species Groups........................................................................ 8 Species associated with ecosystem diversity characteristics of terrestrial vegetation or aquatic systems ......................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Desert Birding in Arizona with a Focus on Urban Birds
    Desert Birding in Arizona With a Focus on Urban Birds By Doris Evans Illustrations by Doris Evans and Kim Duffek A Curriculum Guide for Elementary Grades Tucson Audubon Society Urban Biology Program Funded by: Arizona Game & Fish Department Heritage Fund Grant Tucson Water Tucson Audubon Society Desert Birding in Arizona With a Focus on Urban Birds By Doris Evans Illustrations by Doris Evans and Kim Duffek A Curriculum Guide for Elementary Grades Tucson Audubon Society Urban Biology Program Funded by: Arizona Game & Fish Department Heritage Fund Grant Tucson Water Tucson Audubon Society Tucson Audubon Society Urban Biology Education Program Urban Birding is the third of several projected curriculum guides in Tucson Audubon Society’s Urban Biology Education Program. The goal of the program is to provide educators with information and curriculum tools for teaching biological and ecological concepts to their students through the studies of the wildlife that share their urban neighborhoods and schoolyards. This project was funded by an Arizona Game and Fish Department Heritage Fund Grant, Tucson Water, and Tucson Audubon Society. Copyright 2001 All rights reserved Tucson Audubon Society Arizona Game and Fish Department 300 East University Boulevard, Suite 120 2221 West Greenway Road Tucson, Arizona 85705-7849 Phoenix, Arizona 85023 Urban Birding Curriculum Guide Page Table of Contents Acknowledgements i Preface ii Section An Introduction to the Lessons One Why study birds? 1 Overview of the lessons and sections Lesson What’s That Bird? 3 One
    [Show full text]
  • Landbird Monitoring in the Sonoran Desert Network Annual Report, 2010
    National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Natural Resource Program Center Landbird Monitoring in the Sonoran Desert Network Annual Report, 2010 Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/SODN/NRTR—2011/418 ON THE COVER White-winged dove (Zenaida asiatica). Photo ©Robert Shantz. Landbird Monitoring in the Sonoran Desert Network Annual Report, 2010 Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/SODN/NRTR—2011/418 Authors Moez Ali Rocky Mountain Bird Observatory 230 Cherry Street, Suite 150 Fort Collins, Colorado 80521 Kristen Beaupré National Park Service Sonoran Desert Network 7660 E. Broadway Blvd, Suite 303 Tucson, Arizona 85710 Robert E. Bennetts National Park Service Southern Plains Network Capulin Volcano National Monument PO Box 40 Des Moines, New Mexico 88418 Editing Emily Yost Utah State University Department of Environment and Society 5215 Old Main Hill Logan, Utah 84322-5215 January 2011 U.S. Department of the Interior National Park Service Natural Resource Program Center Fort Collins, Colorado The National Park Service, Natural Resource Program Center publishes a range of reports that ad- dress natural resource topics of interest and applicability to a broad audience in the National Park Ser- vice and others in natural resource management, including scientists, conservation and environmental constituencies, and the public. The Natural Resource Technical Report Series is used to disseminate results of scientific studies in the physical, biological, and social sciences for both the advancement of science and the achievement of the National Park Service mission. The series provides contributors with a forum for displaying com- prehensive data that are often deleted from journals because of page limitations. All manuscripts in the series receive the appropriate level of peer review to ensure that the information is scientifically credible, technically accurate, appropriately written for the intended audience, and de- signed and published in a professional manner.
    [Show full text]
  • Riparian Research and Management: Past, Present, Future
    Chapter 11. Terrestrial Vertebrates of Mesquite Bosques in Southwestern North America R. Roy Johnson, Elaine E. Johnson, and Steven W. Carothers Introduction The major emphasis of this chapter is to address the species richness and popula- tion densities of land vertebrates in riparian mesquite bosques (woodlands). We find no single publication that lists vertebrates—amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals—of riparian mesquites of the Southwest lowlands. These vertebrates are listed for a few river valleys, such as the Santa Cruz River (Webb et al. 2014) and San Pedro River (Stromberg and Tellman 2009), but not for the Southwest as a whole. This chapter pres- ents a summary of the vertebrate fauna of mesquite bosques. Our lists of vertebrates of bosques and/or associated cottonwood-willow forests and riparian deciduous woodlands have been constructed from literature, historic records and specimens, and our first-hand knowledge. Mesquite Bottomlands as Wildlife Habitat A large number of the vertebrate species occurring as obligate and facultative riparian species in cottonwood-willow gallery forests also occur in mesquite bosques. These species inhabit riparian mesquites not only along streams but also along dry watercourses (tables 12–15). An amphibian or reptile species may often occur in cotton- wood-willow or mixed deciduous forests, in mesquite bosques, or in upland ecosystems. A mammal species—except larger mammals and bats—may also often occur in one of these three watershed zones. Although an avian species may use one of those three zones, several species occur in all three zones. Some birds, especially larger species, roost and nest at distances from riparian ecosystems but spend parts of the day flying over and/or foraging in bosques and adjacent zones.
    [Show full text]