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doi: 10.7717/peerj.5881. eCollection 2018.

Factors affecting the distribution and abundance of autumn vagrant New World warblers in northwestern California and southern Oregon

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Factors affecting the distribution and abundance of autumn vagrant New World warblers in northwestern California and southern Oregon

C John Ralph et al. PeerJ..

Abstract

Birds found outside their typical range, or vagrants, have fascinated naturalists for decades. Despite broad interest in vagrancy, few attempts have been made to statistically examine the explanatory variables potentially responsible for the phenomenon. In this study, we used multiple linear regression to model the occurrence of 28 rare warbler species (family Parulidae) in autumn in northern California and southern Oregon as a function of migration distance, continental population size, distance, and bearing to both closest breeding population and breeding population center. In addition to our predictive model, we used capture data from the California coast to 300 km inland to examine relationships between the presence of vagrant warblers, regional warbler species richness and age class distribution. Our study yielded three important results: (1) vagrancy is strongly correlated with larger North American population size; (2) vagrants are more common at some coastal sites; and (3) where young birds are over-represented, vagrants tend to occur-such as on the coast and at far inland sites. Of the many explanations of rare and vagrant individuals, we feel that the most likely is that these birds represent the ends of the distributions of a normal curve of migration direction, bringing some few migrants to locations out of their normal migratory range as vagrants. We also examine the underrepresented species that, according to our model, are overdue for being recorded in our study area.

Keywords: Age ratio; California; Migration; Oregon; Parulidae; Vagrant birds; Warbler.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that there are no competing interests.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Map of the study area.
Location of capture stations across the study area, and further divided into biogeographical regions based on similarities of distance to the coast, altitude, and habitat.
Figure 2
Figure 2. Visualization of the top model predicting vagrant warbler occurrence.
Visualization of our top model demonstrating a positive correlation between North American population size and number of vagrants detected in northern California (taken from Harris, 2006). Each four-letter code represents the AOU short-hand abbreviation for each warbler species. Orange marks indicate predicted occurrence of yet unrecorded vagrant warbler species in northern California; six unrecorded vagrant warbler species have small populations and thus do not appear in this figure as they would fall below, or well below, an observation of a single individual predicted: Tropical Parula, Painted Redstart, Olive Warbler, Swainson’s Warbler, Golden-cheeked Warbler, and Kirtland’s Warbler.
Figure 3
Figure 3. Diversity estimates of warblers at banding stations.
Estimated number of vagrant warbler species (A) at the 11 stations with at least one species of vagrant recorded; percent values indicate the proportion of warbler species richness represented by vagrants. Estimated total warbler species (B) at all 28 bird capture stations, with standard error bars, and grouped (colored) by the eight biogeographic regions in southern Oregon and northern California between 1992 and 2008.
Figure 4
Figure 4. Relationship between vagrant and young warblers.
Visualization of our linear regression examining the relationship between the number of vagrant warblers and proportion of non-vagrant warbler age ratios (hatching year [HY]/after-hatching year [AHY]). Data were collected from 28 bird capture stations, across eight biogeographic regions, operated in southern Oregon and northern California between 1992 and 2008.
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