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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
Repeated Observations Of Northern Goshawks Foraging As Terrestrial Predators, Robert A. Miller
Repeated Observations Of Northern Goshawks Foraging As Terrestrial Predators, Robert A. Miller
Intermountain Bird Observatory Publications and Presentations
The Northern Goshawk (Accipiter gentilis; hereafter goshawk) is a generalist predator occupying boreal and temperate forests of the Holarctic (Squires and Reynolds 1997). The diet of goshawks has been studied in many areas and varies substantially among study sites, but some avian and mammalian genera are consistently represented (Squires and Reynolds 1997, Squires and Kennedy 2006). Within the northern Great Basin of North America, the breeding-season diet of goshawks is often dominated by Belding's ground squirrels (Urocitellus beldingi, also known as Spermophilus beldingi; Younk and Bechard 1994, Miller et al. 2014). The local reliance upon …
Flushing Responses Of Golden Eagles (Aquila Chrysaetos) In Response To Recreation, Robert J. Spaul, Julie A. Heath
Flushing Responses Of Golden Eagles (Aquila Chrysaetos) In Response To Recreation, Robert J. Spaul, Julie A. Heath
Biology Faculty Publications and Presentations
Disturbance because of human activity, including recreation on wildlands, can affect bird behavior which in turn can reduce breeding success, an important consideration for species of management concern. We observed Golden Eagles (Aquila chysaetos) during the breeding season to determine whether the probability of flushing was affected by the type of recreationist, distance to encounter, eagle nest attendance, or date. We monitored eagles in 23 nesting territories from distant (600-1,200 m) observation points and recorded recreation activity within 1,200 m of eagles in the Owyhee Front of southwestern Idaho. In most (86%, n = 270) encounters, eagles did …
First Record Of Nestling Relocation By Adult Gyrfalcons (Falco Rusticolus) Following Nest Collapse, Bryce W. Robinson, Neil Paprocki, David L. Anderson, Marc J. Bechard
First Record Of Nestling Relocation By Adult Gyrfalcons (Falco Rusticolus) Following Nest Collapse, Bryce W. Robinson, Neil Paprocki, David L. Anderson, Marc J. Bechard
Raptor Research Center Publications and Presentations
Nest collapse has been documented in many bird species, with little discussion of adult behavior following collapse. We present evidence of a partial collapse of a Gyrfalcon (Falco rusticolus) nest during the nestling period and the subsequent adult response. A nest camera captured the nest collapse and showed one adult Gyrfalcon holding a live nestling in its beak before leaving the nest. Later, we found the surviving nestling alive in an alternate nest 5 m from the original nest, presumably transported there by the adult. We believe this is the first report of an adult Gyrfalcon moving a …