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Multiscale Habitat Selection by Burrowing Owls in Black-Tailed Prairie Dog Colonies

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Lantz, Sarah J, Conway, Courtney J, and Anderson, Stanley H, Multiscale Habitat Selection by Burrowing Owls in Black-Tailed Prairie Dog Colonies: .

Summary

Some populations of western burrowing owls (Athene cunicularia hypugaea) have declined in recent decades. To design and implement effective recovery efforts, we need a better understanding of how distribution and demographic traits are influenced by habitat quality. To this end, we measured spatial patterns of burrowing owl breeding habitat selection within black-tailed prairie dog (Cynomys ludovicianus) colonies in northeastern Wyoming, USA. We compared burrow-, site-, colony-, and landscape-scale habitat parameters between burrowing owl nest burrows (n = 105) and unoccupied burrows (n = 85). We sampled 4 types of prairie dog colonies: 1) owl-occupied, active with prairie dogs (n = 16); 2) owl-occupied, inactive (n = 13); 3) owl-unoccupied, [...]

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Title Citation Multiscale Habitat Selection by Burrowing Owls in Black-Tailed Prairie Dog Colonies

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