(For an Adobe Reader version of this report, click here)
I. History..................................................................................................................... 3
II. Mission Statement.............................................................................................. 3
III. Personnel............................................................................................................. 4
A. Research Team................................................................................................... 4
1.
Faculty and Research Associates............................................................................ 4
2.
Research Group.................................................................................................... 4
B. Steering Committee......................................................................................... 5
IV. INTRODUCTION...................................................................................................... 6
V. THE CWE IN ACTION................................................................................................ 6
A. The Triangle Island Seabird
Research Station..................................... 6
B. Integrated Shorebird Research................................................................. 7
C. The Marbled Murrelet Project.................................................................. 8
D. Sea Duck Ecology............................................................................................. 9
E. Heron Working Group................................................................................... 13
G. Ecological physiology................................................................................ 14
I. Population ecology of landbirds............................................................ 16
VI. Conferences....................................................................................................... 18
VII Funding............................................................................................................... 18
Viii. Publications................................................................................................... 24
A. Papers in
Refereed Journals.................................................................................... 24
B. Book
Chapters or Conference Proceedings.............................................................. 29
C. Other
Publications................................................................................................. 29
D. Theses.................................................................................................................. 29
Under the Migratory Birds Convention and Canada
Wildlife Acts, the mandate of the Canadian Wildlife Service is to protect and
conserve migratory bird populations. In
the 21st century, this historical mandate is broadening to encompass other
environmental concerns such as species at risk, biodiversity, sustainability
and endangered habitats. To meet these
broad and varied responsibilities, Environment Canada depends on sound science,
and participates in cooperative ventures.
In 1993, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of
Canada,
The mission of the Centre for Wildlife Ecology (CWE) is to foster high quality graduate training and research, conduct basic and applied research in wildlife ecology, and to provide knowledge and personnel that will help Environment Canada and other agencies meet the challenges of conservation in the 21st century. The central concept is to foster synergy between the mission-oriented research and management policies of the Canadian Wildlife Service (CWS) and the basic research agenda of the University. Information, ideas, expertise, resources and opportunity flow back and forth across this interface, giving government agencies access to a broad base of science capability that helps inform policy and decision making, while the university and its faculty and students benefit from enhanced opportunities for research and application of the ideas their disciplines generate.
Name |
Position |
Ron
Ydenberg |
Director, Professor |
Tony
Williams |
Professor |
David
Green |
Associate Director, Assistant Professor |
Dov
Lank |
University Research Associate / Adjunct Professor |
Dan
Esler |
University Research Associate / Adjunct Professor |
Mark
Hipfner |
University Research Associate / CWS Biologist |
Doug
Bertram |
CWS Biologist / Adjunct Professor |
Sean
Boyd |
CWS Research Scientist |
Rob
Butler |
CWS Research Scientist / Adjunct Professor |
Bob
Elner |
CWS Research Scientist |
John
Elliott |
CWS Research Scientist |
Barry
Smith |
CWS Research Scientist / Adjunct Professor |
Fred
Cooke (retired) |
Emeritus Chairholder |
Postdoctoral Fellow |
PhD (in progress) |
MSc (in progress) |
Staff |
Sophie Bourgeon |
Kathy Brodhead |
Samantha Franks |
|
Tomohiro Kuwae |
Lindsay Farrell |
Dan Guertin |
Connie Smith, CWE Research Tech |
Caz Taylor |
Joel Heath |
Dong Han |
Jeanine Bond, Sea Duck Res. Asst. |
Yuri Zharikov |
Sarah Jamieson |
Megan Harrison |
Tyler Lewis, Sea Duck Res. Asst. |
|
Oliver Love |
Sofi Hindmarch |
Glen Keddie, Res. Assist. |
|
Heather Major |
Iain Jones |
|
|
|
Peter Katinic |
|
|
|
Vera Klein |
|
|
|
Lauren Kordonowy |
|
|
|
Erika Lok |
|
|
|
Josh Malt |
|
|
|
Kyle Morrison |
|
|
|
Sam Quinlan |
|
|
|
Michael Silvergieter |
|
|
|
Marc Travers |
|
|
|
Emily Wagner |
|
|
|
Ivy Whitehorne |
|
Visitors |
PhD( defended) |
MSc (defended) |
|
Sue McRae |
Andrea Pomeroy |
Courtney Albert |
|
Who-seng Lee |
|
Eric Davies |
|
Kimi Jaatinen |
|
Molly Kirk |
|
|
|
Sunny LeBourdais |
|
|
|
Holly Middleton |
|
Name |
Position |
Affiliation |
||
Elizabeth
Elle |
Assistant
Professor |
SFU |
||
Arne
Mooers |
Assistant
Professor |
SFU |
||
Robert
Elner |
Head,
Migratory Birds Conservation |
CWS |
||
David
Green |
CWE
faculty (non-voting) |
SFU |
||
Kristina
Rothley (SFU alternate) |
Assistant
Professor |
SFU |
||
Paul
Kluckner |
Regional
Director, ECB PYR |
CWS |
||
Barry
Smith |
Research
Scientist |
CWS |
||
Tony
Williams |
CWE
faculty (non-voting) |
SFU |
||
Ron
Ydenberg |
CWE
Director (non-voting) |
SFU |
||
The aim of this Annual Report is to give an overview
of our activities, outline the progress on new and continuing projects,
describe the personnel involved, and to give some indication of our scientific
and community involvement. Previous
Annual Reports are available from the CWE.
Contact us via our website
http://www.sfu.ca/biology/wildberg/index.html
or contact Ron Ydenberg at ydenberg@sfu.ca.
The past year was the CWE’s 14th, and as this report details, our record of accomplishment in training students, publishing papers, and attracting funding has been sustained. The coming year will be the 5th and last of our current agreement with Environment Canada, and a major focus of the coming months will be renewal. To that end, I want to draw attention to a companion document to this report. In that document we examine each of our major projects from the perspective of Environment Canada’s goals, asking how they further EC’s policy objectives and priorities. (I note here that the organization of projects differs slightly from that presented below.) This document will form an important part of the renewal process, and will help us set objectives for the next agreement.
Finally, I want to acknowledge the continued
contributions of
Coastal
Our ongoing investigations examine breeding propensity and chronology, reproductive performance, nestling diet and development, parental foraging and provisioning patterns, attendance patterns, and adult survival, among other topics. Of particular interest is the issue of how climate-induced fluctuations in the timing and availability of marine prey populations affect seabird reproduction and survival.
The
2006 season: We opened our research
station on
After
the disastrous 2005 seabird breeding and post-breeding seasons, which attracted
considerable media attention over the winter, the much less dramatic 2006
season was very welcome. At
Graduate
students:
In June 2006, Jessica Beaubier defended her
MSc thesis investigating linkages between ocean climate, forage fish energetics,
and seabird breeding success. In January
2007, Eric Davies defended his MSc thesis at SFU, investigating the foraging
ecology of Triangle's alcids using stable isotope analysis. Finally, Kyle Morrison began his MSc at SFU,
co-supervised by David Green, spending the months of July and August on
Shorebirds
are among the most highly migratory of all birds. Populations of many species travel half the
globe in the course of their annual migrations.
The Canadian Wildlife Service has an historical, mandated responsibility
for the conservation of migratory birds.
Great concern has been raised about apparent population declines of many
species over the past two decades. The
CWE is studying two small calidrid sandpipers - western sandpipers and dunlin -
to better understand these apparent declines.
The
majority of the world’s 3.5 – 4.0 million Western Sandpipers stop briefly to
refuel in Boundary Bay or on Robert’s Bank during their annual northward
migration, providing a thrilling sight for local residents. A good fraction of the species population
also stops over on southward migration, following a flight over the
Highlights
from the past year: In March 2006, Dov Lank organized and chaired
the Western Sandpiper Symposium at the first “Shorebird Science in the
This ground-breaking and high profile project examining the biology of the threatened and elusive marbled murrelet continues for its thirteenth year. Dov Lank, Josh Malt, and Mike Silvergeiter continued with the project throughout the year. Dr. Kris Rothley and her MREM graduate student Jenn Barrett continued their work; MREM student Rebecca Harrold also spent a term working on this project. The SFU team worked closely with Louise Waterhouse from the BC Ministry of Forests and other murrelet researchers in government, industry, and academia, including Peter Arcese (UBC) and Alan Burger (UVic).
Dov
Lank continued to serve on the Canadian Marbled Murrelet Recovery Team, which
is headed by former CWE staff member Doug Bertram. This participation enables the results of the
CWE’s research to be rapidly assimilated into evolving policy guidelines for
management of this threatened species, under the protection of the federal
Species at Risk Act and Provincial Identified Wildlife Management
Strategy. Through the Recovery Team,
Lank participated in rewriting the federal recovery strategy and action
plans. He also reviewed the USFWS’s
paper on trends of Marbled Murrelet populations in
MSc student Josh Malt will defend his thesis at the beginning of April 2007. His project is primarily an experimental examination of the magnitude of “edge effects” on the probability of nest survivorship. This topic remains controversial in BC, and has substantial management implications. Jeanine Bond, a CWE MSc graduate, and Mike Silvergeiter managed complex and demanding operations at field sites on Vancouver Island and inland from Squamish, conducting the final year of fieldwork in the edge effects study. MREM student Rebecca Harrold and Dr. Kris Rothley have develop preliminary landscape-level models of nest predation danger based on Josh’s initial results, and this will be tested and modified with the additional data.
Silvergeiter’s thesis will focus on stand-level habitat characteristics, utilizing data collected in previous years, including some he gathered while working as an undergraduate two years ago. MREM student Jenn Barrett, from the Resource Management Department at SFU, is using data collected in previous years to jointly model marine and terrestrial effects on habitat usage and nesting success, following up on work begun by Elsie Krebs. Yuri Zharikov’s second major paper, looking at landscape-level effects on forest habitat usage and nesting success, was accepted by the Journal of Applied Ecology.
As the year closed, our findings were being communicated to interested parties. The CWE organized, co-sponsored and chaired a workshop in Nanaimo in January, co-sponsored with the provincial Ministries of Forest and of the Environment, on techniques for assessing nesting habitat quality. A report from the conference is being published in LINK, the forestry extension publication. Funding for the past and future years has come from the Provincial Forest Science Program, six forest companies, and from an NSERC-CRD grant awarded at the close of 2005.
The
sea duck research group, led by Dan Esler, conducts a broad range of studies
addressing factors affecting population dynamics of sea ducks. Much of the work is conducted along the
Pacific coast from
1. Chronic Effects of the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill
on Sea Ducks – This long-term program continues to evaluate
the progress of population recovery of sea ducks (harlequin ducks and Barrow’s
goldeneye) from the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in
2. Scoter Interactions with Shellfish Aquaculture
in Coastal
Data
collection for this project was completed in 2005 and we are in the analysis
and write-up phases, with 8 papers already published and many others in review
or preparation. Both Tyler and Molly
have graduated and have done a great job getting their work into the primary
literature.
The
findings of this project have been encouraging from the perspective of scoter
conservation. Using a suite of metrics
(habitat use, changes in abundance, survival, foraging behaviour, and habitat
quality), we determined that shellfish aquaculture had either neutral or
beneficial effects on scoters, depending on the location, type of aquaculture,
and prey type. These findings have been
used by the industry and regulators to help chart a sustainable course for BC’s
coastal environments.
3. Behavioural, Distributional, and
Physiological Responses of Scoters to Herring Spawn – Many
birds are known to aggregate at sites where Pacific herring spawn in the
spring. However, the importance of this
phenomenon, in terms of the numbers of species and individuals that use this
ephemeral food resource and in terms of the benefits conferred by foraging on
spawn, has not previously been addressed.
In direct collaboration with the Canadian Wildlife Service and the
4. Staging Habitats of Spring-migrating Surf Scoters
– As part of a collaborative project investigating Surf Scoter spring
migration ecology, Erika Lok (CWE MSc student) is using a combination of
satellite telemetry, radio-telemetry, aerial surveys, and existing GIS habitat
data to investigate habitat use of Surf Scoters along the northern BC coast and
southeast
5. Habitat Use by Sea Ducks in
6. Harlequin Duck Conservation Research
- The CWE and Canadian Wildlife Service have had long-standing conservation
concerns and research interests regarding harlequin ducks in the
During the summers of 2003 and 2004, we conducted studies of harlequin ducks breeding on streams in the southern Coast Mountains of British Columbia, and we are now finishing write-up of reports and papers. This project was funded in part by BC Hydro’s Bridge-Coastal Fish and Wildlife Restoration Program and was led by Dan Esler and Ron Ydenberg. CWE MSc students Jeanine Bond, who completed her degree in December 2005, and Sunny LeBourdais, who graduated in summer 2006, were the workhorses on the project. This research was designed to determine factors affecting distribution and productivity, including abiotic habitat features, presence of fish and invertebrates, and strategies of nutrient acquisition and allocation by females for egg production. Our results indicate that some abiotic features (e.g., slope) are important predictors of harlequin duck occurrence and density, and that fish may have a negative influence, perhaps as a result of their influence on behaviour (and subsequently availability to ducks) of aquatic insects. Female harlequin ducks acquire egg resources entirely from breeding streams, although nutrients acquired on coastal wintering sites may be important for other reproductive stages. Final results of this work will be summarized in a final report for BC Hydro, are available in the theses of Jeanine Bond and Sunny LeBourdais, and are appearing in journal publications.
7. Black Scoter Reproductive Energetics
– In collaboration with the U.S. Geological Survey (Paul Flint), we are
addressing nutrient acquisition and allocation strategies of female black
scoters for meeting costs of reproduction.
Despite clear declines in numbers of Black Scoters breeding in tundra
habitats of
8. Latitudinal Variation in Wintering
Ecology of Surf Scoters – Tens of thousands of surf scoters winter
along the west coast of
9. Barrow’s Goldeneye Population
Delineation – In collaboration with Sean Boyd of the Canadian Wildlife
Service, we are using satellite telemetry to evaluate population structure,
movements, site fidelity, and habitat use of Barrow’s goldeneyes in
10. Offshore Wind Farms and Effects on
Sea Ducks – The CWE has been identified as a collaborator and national
lead on research efforts by the Canadian Wildlife Service to evaluate effects
of offshore wind turbine arrays on wintering and migrating sea ducks. To date, the only offshore wind farm proposed
for
11.
Foraging Strategies of Arctic Wintering Common Eiders - Sea ice
conditions in
The Great Blue Heron, the
largest heron of
In 2006/2007 CWS scientists
Rob Butler and Barry Smith continued to investigate local heron nesting
strategies, habitat use and population dynamics with students from the
CWE. It has been observed that the
overall reproductive success and number of Great Blue Herons in the
In the past year Barry
Smith and Jamie Kenyon, a former CWE MSc student who defended in April of 2005,
have collaborated to publish work stemming from Jamie’s thesis. Jamie and Barry developed ecological models
that examine the possible role of foraging site quality and predation risk in
determining the population dynamics of coastal herons in BC. In addition, Jamie’s thesis pioneered a
methodology for identifying colony locations from foraging ground observations
that increased the number of known colonies and the overall population
estimates in the study area.
Iain Jones, a current MSc student with the CWE, has continued to
work with Rob Butler, examining the role that predation risk plays in determining
colony site selection by closely studying the behavioural and spatial
relationship between coastal herons and their primary predator, the bald
eagle. Paradoxically, it seems that a
large proportion of herons are choosing to nest colonially near active eagle
nests. The working hypothesis is that
herons may benefit from being near one eagle nest by gaining territorial
protection from other intruding eagles.
In utilizing this strategy herons may manage their predation risk as
bald eagle populations continue to recover from previous lows. Very little is known about eagle territoriality
or foraging ecology on the B.C. coast, but their propensity to defend their
nest site from other eagles is a key assumption in the predator protection
hypothesis.
Iain carried out a
successful field season in 2006. He
measured the propensity of Bald Eagles to defend their nests sites through both
field observation and field experimentation within the
Currently Iain is analyzing
his findings and writing his thesis that will likely be defended in September. His analyses thus far have supported the
predator protection hypothesis as an explanation for heron habitat selection
where this associative nesting behaviour is occurring in the
1. Reproductive ecology and physiology:
a) Oliver Love (PhD) is close to completing his thesis on the interaction between corticosterone, reproduction and environmental stress in European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris). Specifically, he is examining the adaptive role of corticosterone in mediating reproductive 'decisions' in females and the consequences of this on offspring phenotype. Maternal corticosterone transferred to the yolk may act as a hormonal cue of maternal condition to the developing embryo enabling mothers to fine-tune the quantity and quality of offspring to prevailing environments;
b) Emily Wagner (MSc) is close to
completing her thesis on anemia and reproductive effort in zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata). She has fully characterised hematological
changes during egg-laying, confirmed that these are hormone- (estrogen)
dependent, and developed hormonal methods for the direct manipulation of
anemia. Since anemia can be a common
symptom associated with disease or toxicological challenge this work will also
be of applied interest;
c)
Lauren Kordonowy (new MSc student) will be investigating the role of estrogens
in hormonally-mediated maternal effects on egg production, offspring sex
ratio and offspring phenotype in European starlings;
d)
Sophie Bourgeon (new post-doctoral fellow) will be investigating causal links
between immunosuppression and oxidative stress in breeding birds using
experimental manipulation of antioxidants in European starlings (Sturnus
vulgaris); she has also developed assays for oxidative stress and total
antioxidant capacity;
e) Marc
Travers (new MSc student) will investigate how
variation in clutch number (due to predation events) affects clutch size, and
the physiological basis of cost of reproduction in free-living song sparrows on
f)
Dong Han (new MSc student) will be bringing molecular tools to bear on
inter-individual variation in reproductive physiology, specifically measuring
ovarian vitellogenin receptor expression in relation to reproductive effort,
and developing an ELISA for apo VLDL II (an improved yolk precursor assay).
2. Plasma metabolites as indicators of physiological state and “condition”: We have continued to extend the application of plasma metabolite analysis for the assessment of fattening rate, general condition, and the relative quality of habitats or sites used by migratory birds, in a wide variety of collaborative studies: a) habitat use over the whole migratory route in western sandpipers (with Drs. Nils Warnock, PRBO Conservation Science, Mary Ann Bishop, Prince William Sound Science Center, and John Takekawa, USGS; see Williams et al. in press); b) habitat use in pre-migratory staging areas for shorebirds in Alaska (with Audrey Taylor and Drs. Abby Powell and Rick Lanctot, University of Alaska Fairbanks); c) altitudinal habitat use in migratory passerines in the Lower Mainland (with Drs. Lesley Evans-Ogden, NSERC PDF at UBC and Kathy Martin); d) plasma metabolites in relation to incubation intensity in different populations of king eiders (with Rebecca McGuire and Dr. Abby Powell, University of Alaska, Fairbanks); e) yolk precursor analysis in relation to migration, timing of arrival and onset of reproduction in snow geese in the high-Arctic (with Dr, Joel Bęty, Universite de Rimouski; f) yolk precursor analysis in relation to stable isotope signatures in marbled murrelets (with Drs Ryan Norris, University of Guelph and Peter Arcese, UBC); g) yolk precursors and migration in surf scoters in California and Alaska (with Matt Wilson and Dr. John Takekawa, USGS); and h) yolk precursors and breeding propensity in lesser scaup (with Kate Martin and Dr. Mark Lindberg, University of Alaska, Fairbanks).
3. Impact of use of MSMA (monosodium
methanearsonate) for bark beetle control on cavity-nesting birds in B.C. forests. Courtney Albert completed her MSc on the
effects of MSMA on adult and nestling birds (in collaboration with Drs. John
Elliott and Christy Morrissey of Environment Canada, and Dr. William
Cullen, UBC). Zebra Finches were exposed
to this pesticide at doses similar to those found in bark beetle samples from
MSMA stands of trees treated in the southern interior of
4. E-Bird:
an NSERC-funded Network on avian
reproduction and environmental change: integrating ecology and physiology. NSERC funding (to
TDW) has supported a Canadian component of, and Canadian participation in, this
international research network, with partners in the
CWE’s research on landbirds is coordinated
by David Green and addresses two key questions in avian ecology and
conservation. Firstly, we are interested in how migratory strategies of
individual birds influence their fitness and the demography of populations.
This question is addressed using two model systems; American dippers within the
We briefly describe these studies below:
Migratory behaviour and population
demography of American dippers
We have studied dippers in the Chilliwack River Valley, BC since 1999. The majority of dippers, in this and other populations, make seasonal movements between low elevation wintering grounds on large rivers and breeding grounds on higher elevation tributaries. However some individuals do not undergo this seasonal migration and remain on permanent territories year round. We are currently using morphometric data, mark-recapture analysis and radiotelemetry to investigate whether migratory/sedentary behaviour is associated with distinct morphological and physiological traits, and to examine how variation in migratory behaviour influences natal philopatry, recruitment, survival and reproductive success of American dippers. Analysis of the long-term data set conducted by Elizabeth Gillis (submitted to Ecology) suggests that sedentary individuals have higher reproductive success but lower survival than migrants. Ivy Whitehorne therefore initiated an MSc project in 2006 examining whether the higher survival of migrants is due to their lower reproductive effort or because not having to defend a breeding territory in the winter improves their ability to deal with fluctuations in prey availability. Holly Middleton defended her MSc examining variation in dispersal strategies and juvenile survival in Dec 2006. She found that juveniles begin to disperse soon after fledging, but that delayed dispersal increases the probability that juveniles recruit into the breeding population. Intriguingly, variation in dispersal behaviour is linked to both parental behaviour (whether they renest) and fledgling traits (early foraging behavior).
Migratory behaviour and reproduction in
Yellow warblers
We have studied the breeding biology of Yellow warblers, a declining songbird dependant on riparian habit, in Revelstoke since 2004. Sam Quinlan, an NSERC Industrial student supported by BC Hydro, has used information that can be obtained from hydrogen isotope ratios in feathers to determine where yellow warblers molt and over-winter. In 2007 he will defend his thesis that examines how molt and migratory strategies influence the survival and subsequent reproductive success of birds that return to their breeding grounds in Revelstoke. This work will provide considerable insight into migratory connectivity of Yellow warblers and the importance of carry-over effects during the winter period on subsequent productivity.
Water use decisions and the demography of
a riparian dependant songbird
Human activities have caused a dramatic loss in the
amount of riparian habitat in
Habitat selection mechanisms in Brewer’s sparrow
The Brewer’s sparrow is a provincially red-listed species that is restricted to the sagebrush steppe, an ecosystem type that is under intense pressure from agricultural and residential development. Research on Brewer’s sparrows was initiated by the Canadian Wildlife Service (Pam Krannitz, Nancy Mahony, Kathy Martin) in 1997 and extended to include multiple sites within the Okanagan in 2003. Megan Harrison, an MSc student supervised by David Green and Pam Krannitz (CWS) has developed a research proposal that will extend previous work and examine the role of habitat metrics and conspecifics on settlement patterns. This research will commence in April 2007 and has the potential to improve habitat selection models that currently do not accurately predict the species’ distribution, and explain why apparently suitable habitat is not occupied.
Impacts of changing agricultural land use on the distribution and
breeding performance of barn owls
Land
used for agriculture provides habitat for a diversity of wildlife. However, the intensification of agricultural
practises, increased use of pesticides and encroachment of urban centres have
been linked to the widespread decline of many species associated with agricultural
land in
Offshore Wind Farms and Birds – Dan Esler
organized this conference which was held in Delta in February 2006, and was
attended by federal and provincial agency folks, industry, consultants, and
academics.
Environmental Change and Avian Reproduction – E-BIRD (see G.4 above) and CWE organised a 2-day workshop on environmental change focusing on Canada and avian/mammalian population responses in March 2006 which was attended by 75 researchers from academia, non-government and provincial/federal government agencies.
Budget
1
April 2006 to 31 March 2007 was the fourth year of the current five-year
agreement between
The
chart has been revised from the format of previous years to compare revenue
projections (formulated for this third agreement) to actual revenue from
Environment Canada, SFU and other industrial, provincial, federal and
international sectors.
Category for Chart |
Centre for
Wildlife Ecology Annual Financial Report |
||
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2006/2007
Fiscal Year |
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1 April 2006 -
31 March 2007 |
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Scbolaships,
Fellowships, Grants for Students |
|
|
|
PhD |
|
Northern Scientific
Training Program |
|
Sarah Jamieson |
$3,040 |
Northern Scientific
Training Program |
|
Joel Heath |
$3,953 |
SFU Fellowships etc |
Joel Heath, Sarah Jamieson,
Andrea Pomeroy |
$25,500 |
|
NSERC PGS-03 |
|
Lindsay Farrell |
$7,000 |
Travel Award Grad Studies -
International Travel |
|
Lindsay Farrell |
$6,000 |
SFU Fellowships etc |
Heather Major |
$6,000 |
|
|
|
|
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|
M Sc |
|
|
|
|
|
SFU Fellowships etc |
Kyle Morrison - CD Nelson
Entrance Scholarship |
$18,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
NSERC RGS-M |
|
Samantha Franks |
$17,300 |
NSERC - PGS-M |
|
Molly Kirk |
$8,650 |
NSERC - Industrial |
|
Sam Quinlan |
$21,000 |
NSERC - PGS-M |
|
Ivy Whitehorne |
$17,300 |
NSERC CGS-M |
|
Megan Harrison |
$11,667 |
SFU Fellowships etc |
Iain Jones TA, GF |
$10,500 |
|
SFU Fellowships etc |
Mike Silvergieter TA |
$3,500 |
|
SFU Fellowships etc |
Megan Harrison |
$7,000 |
|
International |
|
Sofi Hindmarch |
$12,000 |
|
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|
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General Funding
for CWE |
|
EC/Core |
|
EC/CWS Annual Chair Funding
1 April 06 to 31 March 07 |
$200,000 |
|
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|
SFU |
Ydenberg RC |
SFU Dean of Science:
Contribution to Centre for Wildlife Ecology (2nd of 5 yrs) |
$30,000 |
|
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SFU |
SFU |
SFU Contribution to Faculty
Salaries (Ydenberg Williams Green) |
$347,257 |
|
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|
Other EC |
Hipfner M |
Science Horizon - Recovery
of nocturnal Burrow-Nesting Seabirds following eradication of non-indigenous
predators in BC - Haida Gwaii |
$7,590 |
|
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Generated
Research Funding |
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Aquaculture |
|
NSERC |
Bendell-Young L |
NSERC Strategic Grant "Towards a Sustainable Shellfish
Aquaculture Industry" (5th of 5 yrs) |
$56,000 |
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Barrows
Goldeneye |
|
International |
Ydenberg RC, Ost M |
Riske Creek Project
(2nd of 3 years) |
$12,986 |
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Ducks |
|
International |
Esler D |
US Fish & Wildlife: Sea
Duck Joint Venture (2nd of 3 years) |
$39,191 |
|
|
|
|
International |
Esler D |
US Fish & Wildlife: Sea
Duck Joint Venture (1st of 3 years) |
$29,536 |
|
|
|
|
International |
Esler D |
USGS - Female Black Scoters
(1st of 2 years) |
$25,194 |
|
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|
|
International |
Esler D |
USGS - Exxon/Harlequin Duck
(1st of 3 years) |
$87,192 |
|
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International |
Esler D |
USGS - FOIA |
$4,527 |
|
|
|
|
Other EC |
Esler D, Boyd S |
EC: Marine Bird
Conservation (2nd of 5 years) |
$35,000 |
|
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Other EC |
Esler D |
Wind Farms |
$7,700 |
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|
|
Other EC |
Esler D |
Wind Farms (1st of 3 years) |
$14,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Land Birds |
|
Provincial |
Green DJ |
BC Hydro |
$18,135 |
|
|
|
|
Other EC |
Green DJ |
Science Horizon - Song Bird
Habitat Use and Migration Monitoring |
$9,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Marbled
Murrelets |
|
Provincial |
Lank DB |
Forest Science Program -
Mamu - Edge Effects |
$75,000 |
|
|
|
|
Provincial |
Lank DB |
|
$21,525 |
|
|
|
|
Industry |
Lank DB |
Interfor - Mamu (NSERC
match) |
$52,500 |
|
|
|
|
Industry |
Lank DB |
Interfor - Mamu (not NSERC
match |
$25,000 |
|
|
|
|
NSERC |
Lank DB |
NSERC CRD (2st of 3 years) |
$67,500 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Physiological
Ecology |
|
NSERC |
Williams TD |
NSERC Special Research |
$58,700 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other EC |
Hipfner MJ |
Environment |
$9,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Western
Sandpipers |
|
International |
Ydenberg RC, Baird P |
US Army Corps of
Engineers: Multinational Study of
Neotropical Migrants: The Western Sandpiper as model. |
$107,360 |
|
|
|
|
Other EC |
Ydenberg RC, |
CWS: Western Sandpipers
Equipment: |
$4,250 |
|
|
|
|
International |
|
Caz Taylor NSF postdoctoral
funding (2/3 years?): |
$57,950 |
|
|
modeling sandpiper
migration |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dunlin |
|
NSERC |
Zharikov |
Yuri Zharikov's NSERC
postdoc (2/2): Modelling shorebird use of intertidal habitat+C155 |
$40,000 |
|
|
|
|
International |
Lank DB |
Seadoc Society: Stable isotope analyses of Dunlin diet in
the Skagit River Delta. |
$8,761 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
NSERC |
|
|
|
|
|
NSERC |
Green DJ |
NSERC Individual Research
Grant - Dispersal and migration behaviour of birds in natural and modified
landscapes (3nd of 5 years) |
$22,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NSERC |
Lank DB |
NSERC Individual Research
Grant - Maintaining variation in
ecologically significant traits in birds (4rd of 4 years) |
$24,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NSERC |
Williams TD |
NSERC Individual Research
Grant- "Physiology of
life-histories: egg size and number and costs of reproduction" (4th of 4
yrs) |
$43,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NSERC |
Ydenberg RC |
NSERC Individual Research
Grant - "Predation danger and the annual cycle of migrants (2st of 5 yrs) |
$51,300 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Grand Total |
$1,769,564 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
SFU In-Kind |
$116,678 |
This list reflects those publications produced since our last
report (publications that were “in press” or “submitted” for the last report
are included and have been updated). We
continue to publish very actively, with 29 publications in press and 30 submitted. Over the past year, one Doctoral and five
Masters students successfully defended their theses. Most of our publications relate to the
research carried out in the main CWE programs and most refer to work carried
out in the
In
press:
Ball, J.R.,
D. Esler and J.A. Schmutz. In press. Proximate composition, energetic value,
and relative abundance of prey fish from the inshore eastern
Breuner,
C.W., S.E. Lynn, G.E. Julian, J.M. Cornelius, B.J. Heidinger, O.P. Love, R.S.
Sprague, H. Wada and B.A. Whitman. In press. Plasma binding globulins and the
acute stress response. Horm. Met. Res.
Evans Ogden, L.J., D.B. Lank and S. Bittmann. In press.
Use of agricultural land by shorebirds with special reference to the
Fraser River Delta.
Fernandez, G.
and D.B. Lank. In press. Variation in the wing morphology of western sandpipers
(Calidris mauri) in relation to sex, age and annual cycle. Auk.
Gorman, K.B.,
D. Esler, P.L. Flint and T.D. Williams. In press. Nutrient reserve dynamics
during egg production by female Greater Scaup (Aythya marila):
relationships with timing of reproduction. Auk.
Heath, J.P.,
H.G. Gilchrist and R.C. Ydenberg. In press. Can diving models predict patterns
of foraging behaviour? Diving by common
eiders in an arctic polynya. Anim. Behav.
Hipfner,
J.M., M.R. Charete and G.S. Blackburn. In press. Subcolony variation in
breeding success in Tufted Puffins, its association with foraging ecology, and
its implications. Auk 124.
Jamieson,
S.E., H.G. Gilchrist, F.R. Merkel, A.W. Diamond and K. Falk. In press.
Endogenous reserve dynamics of Northern Common Eiders wintering in
Jamieson,
S.E., H.G. Gilchrist, F.R. Merkel, K. Falk and A.W. Diamond. In press. An evaluation
of methods used to estimate carcass composition of Common Eiders. Wildl. Biol.
Kenyon, J.K.,
B.D. Smith and R.W. Butler. In press. Can redistribution of breeding colonies
on a landscape mitigate changing predation danger? J. Avian Biol.
Lewis, T.L.,
D. Esler and W.S. Boyd. In press. Foraging behaviours of Surf and White-winged
Scoters in relation to clam density: inferring food availability and habitat
quality. Auk 125.
Merkel, F.R.,
S.E. Jamieson, K. Falk and A. Mosbech. In press. The diet of Common Eiders
wintering in Nuuk, southwest
Merkel, F.R.,
A. Mosbech, C. Sonne, A. Flagstad, K. Falk and S.E. Jamieson. In press. Local
movements, home ranges and body condition of Common Eiders wintering in
Middleton,
H.A., D.J. Green and E.A. Krebs. In press. Fledgling begging and parental responsiveness
in American dippers (Cinclus mexicanus). Behaviour.
Miller, E.H.,
J. Williams, S.E. Jamieson, H.G. Gilchrist and M.L. Mallory. In press. Allometry,
variation, and bilateral asymmetry of an internal sexually-selected structure:
The vocal tract of Common Eiders (Somateria mollissima) and King Eiders
(S. spectabilis). J. Avian Biol.
Mulcahy,
D.M., K.A. Burek and D. Esler. In press. Histology of fabric collars from
percutaneous antennas on intracoelomic radio transmitters implanted in
harlequin ducks. Journal of Avian Medicine and Surgery 19.
Nicholls,
J.A., A.A.
Norris, D.R.,
D.B. Lank, J. Pither, D. Chipley, R.C. Ydenberg and T.K. Kyser. In press. Trace
element profiles as unique identifiers of western sandpiper (Calidris mauri)
populations.
Regehr, H.M.,
M.S. Rodway, M.J.F. Lemon and J.M. Hipfner. In press. Recovery of the Ancient
Murrelet colony on
Rowland, E.,
O.P. Love, J.J. Verspoor and T.D. Williams. In press. Manipulating maternal
quality reveals developmental sensitivity in the smaller sex of a passerine
bird. J. Avian Biol.
Salvante,
K.G. In press. Techniques for the study of integrated immune function in birds.
Auk.
Salvante,
K.G., G. Lin, R.L. Walzem and T.D. Williams. In press. What comes first, the
zebra finch or the egg? Temperature-dependent reproductive, physiological and
behavioural plasticity in egg-laying zebra finches. J. Exp. Biol.
Verspoor, J.,
O. Love, O. Rowland, E. Chin and T.D. Williams. In press. Sex-specific development
of avian flight performance under experimentally altered rearing conditions.
Behav. Ecol.
Wagner, E.C.
and T.D. Williams. In press. Experimental (anti-estrogen mediated) reduction in
egg size negatively affects offspring growth and survival. Physiological and
Biochemical Zoology.
Williams,
T.D., N. Warnock, J. Takekawa and M.A. Bishop. In press. Flyway scale variation
in plasma triglyceride levels as an index of refueling rate in spring migrating
Western Sandpipers. Auk.
Zharikov, Y.,
D.B. Lank and F. Cooke. In press. Influence of landscape structure on nest site
selection and breeding success in a threatened Alcid, the marbled murrelet:
management implications. J. Appl. Ecol.
Submitted
Addison, B.,
A.S. Kitaysky and J.M. Hipfner. Submitted. Sex allocation in the single-chick
broods of rhinoceros auklets: test of environment, mate quality and female
condition hypotheses. Behav. Ecol.
Arcese, P.,
A.E. Burger, C.L. Staudhammer, J.P. Gibbs, E. Selak, G.D. Sutherland, J.D.
Steventon, S.A. Fall, D.F. Bertram, I.A. Manley, S.E. Runyan, W.L. Harper, A.
Harfenist, B.K. Schroeder, D.B. Lank, S.A. Cullen, J.A. Deal, D. Lindsay and G.
Jones. Submitted. Monitoring designs to detect population declines and identify
their cause for the Marbled Murrelet.
Ball, J.R.,
J.A. Schmutz and D. Esler. Submitted. Pre-fledging survival of Red-throated
Loons in
Bond, J.C.,
D. Esler and K.A. Hobson. Submitted. Isotopic evidence for sources of nutrients
allocated to clutch formation by harlequin ducks. Condor.
Bond, J.C.,
D. Esler and T.D. Williams. Submitted. Breeding propensity of harlequin ducks Histrionicus
histrionicus estimated using yolk precursors and radio telemetry. Auk.
Davies, W.E.
Submitted. Taking stable isotopes into the field: methods for calculating
field-based discrimination factors. Oecologia.
Evans Ogden,
L.J., S. Bittmann, D.B. Lank and F.C. Stevenson. Submitted. Factors influencing
use of farmland habitat by shorebirds wintering in the Fraser River Delta,
Fernández,
G.J. and D.B. Lank. Submitted. Sex differences of non-breeding western sandpipers
(Calidris mauri) in foraging behavior and susceptibility to
interference. Ibis.
Gillis, E.A.,
D.J.
Gorman, K.B.,
D. Esler and T.D. Williams. Submitted. Plasma yolk precursor dynamics during
egg production by female Greater Scaup (Aythya marila): characterization
and indices of reproductive state. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology.
Gurd, D.B.,
D. Kinakin, D. Siu, J. Chandler and M. Mo. Submitted. Estimating local species
richness from historical range maps: how robust are methods to errors in
species’ distributions? Global Ecol. Biogeogr.
Hipfner,
J.M., and J.L. Greenwood. Submitted. Breeding biology of the Common Murre at
Triangle Island, British Columbia, 2002-2006. Northwestern Naturalist.
Hipfner,
J.M., J. Dale and K.J. McGraw. Submitted. Variation in yolk carotenoid profiles
in a marine bird community: links to foraging strategies and breeding success.
J. Anim. Ecol.
Kirk, M., D.
Esler and W.S. Boyd. Submitted. Variation in morphology and availability of
mussels in an aquaculture-modified landscape: implications for molluscivorous
sea ducks. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser.
Love, O.P.,
K.E. Wynne-Edwards, L. Bond and T.D. Williams. Submitted. Within- and
among-clutch variation in levels of yolk corticosterone in the European
starling. Hormones and Behavior.
Malt, J.M.
and D.B. Lank. Submitted. Temporal dynamics of edge effects on nest predation
risk on the marbled murrelet. Biol. Conserv.
Merkel, F.R.,
A. Mosbech, S.E. Jamieson and K. Falk. Submitted. The diet of King Eiders
wintering in Nuuk,
Mulcahy, D.M.
and D. Esler. Submitted. Survival of captive and free-ranging harlequin ducks (Histrionicus
histrionicus) following surgical liver biopsy. Journal of Avian Medicine
and Surgery.
Nilsson,
P.B., T.E. Hollmen, S. Atkinson, K.L. Mashburn, P.A. Tuomi, D. Esler, D.M.
Mulcahy and D.J. Rizzolo. Submitted. Effects of ACTH, capture, and short term
confinement on corticosterone concentrations in harlequin ducks (Histrionicus
histrionicus). Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A.
Pomeroy,
A.C., D.A. Acevedo Seaman, R.W. Butler, R.W. Elner, T.D. Williams and R.C.
Ydenberg. Submitted. Management implications of feeding-danger tradeoffs in
site selection by migrants. J. Appl. Ecol.
Reneerkens,
J., J.B. Almeida, D.B. Lank, J. Jukema, R.B. Lanctot, R.I.G. Morrison, W.I.C.
Rijpstra, D. Schamel, H. Schekkererman, J.S. Sinninghe Damsté, P.S. Tomkovich,
D.M. Tracy, I. Tulp and T. Piersma. Submitted. Parental role division predicts
avian preen wax cycles: a comparative study of sandpipers. Ibis.
Salvante,
K.G., F. Vézina and T.D. Williams. Submitted. Evidence for within-individual
energy reallocation in cold-challenged, egg-producing birds. J. Exp. Biol.
Schamber,
J.L., D. Esler and P.L. Flint. Submitted. Evaluating the validity of using
unverified indices of body condition. Ecology.
Waterhouse,
F.L., A. Donaldson, D.B. Lank, P.K. Ott and E.A. Krebs. Submitted. Using air
photos to interpret quality of Marbled Murrelet nesting habitat in
Ydenberg,
R.C., R.W. Butler and D.B. Lank. Submitted. Effects of predator landscapes on
the evolutionary ecology of routing, timing and molt by long-distance migrants.
J. Avian Biol.
Zera, A.J.,
L.G. Harshman and T.D. Williams. Submitted. Evolutionary endocrinology: the
developing synthesis between endocrinology and evolutionary genetics. Ann. Rev.
Ecol. Evol. System.
2007
Addison, B.,
R.C. Ydenberg and B.D. Smith. 2007. Tufted puffins (Fratercula cirrhata)
respond to predation danger during colony approach flights. Auk 124:
63-70.
Gorman, K.B.,
P.L. Flint, D. Esler and T.D. Williams. 2007. Ovarian follicle dynamics of
female Greater Scaup during egg production. J. Field Ornithol. 78:
64-73.
Gurd, D.B. 2007. Predicting resource partitioning and
community organization of filter-feeding dabbling ducks from functional
morphology. Amer. Nat. 169: 334-343.
Lewis, T.L.,
D. Esler and W.S. Boyd. 2007. Effects of predation by sea ducks on clam
abundance in soft-bottom intertidal habitats. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 329:
131-144.
Lewis, T.L.,
D. Esler and W.S. Boyd. 2007. Foraging behaviours of surf scoters and
white-winged scoters at spawning sites of Pacific herring. Condor 109:
216-222.
Major, H.L.,
I.L. Jones, M.R. Charette and A.W. Diamond. 2007. Variations in the diet of
introduced
Mathot, K.,
B.D. Smith and R.W. Elner. 2007. Latitudinal clines in food distribution
correlate with differential migration in the western sandpiper. Ecology 88:
781-791.
Ost, M., C.W.
Clark, M. Kilpi and R. Ydenberg. 2007. Parental effort and reproductive skew in
coalitions of brood-rearing female common eiders. Am. Nat. 169.
Salvante,
K.G., G. Lin, R.L. Walzem and T.D. Williams. 2007. Characterization of VLDL
particle size diameter dynamics in relation to egg production in a passerine
bird. J. Exp. Biol. 210: 1064-1074.
Zimmerman, K.
and J.M. Hipfner. 2007. Egg size, eggshell porosity, and incubation period in
the marine bird family Alcidae. Auk 124: 307-315.
2006
Acevedo
Seaman, D.A., C.G. Guglielmo, R.W. Elner and T.D. Williams. 2006.
Landscape-scale physiology: Site differences in refueling rates indicated by
plasma metabolite analysis in free-living migratory sandpipers. Auk 123:
563-574.
Bond, J.C.
and D. Esler. 2006. Nutrient acquisition by female Harlequin Ducks prior to
spring migration and reproduction: evidence for body mass optimization.
Esler, D.,
Falk, K.,
F.R. Merkel, K. Kampp and S.E. Jamieson. 2006. Embedded lead shot and
infliction rates of Common Eiders Somateria mollissima and King Eiders S.
spectabilis wintering in southwest
Fernandez,
G.J. and D.B. Lank. 2006. Sex, age, and body size distributions of Western
Sandpipers during the nonbreeding season with respect to local habitat. Condor
108: 547-557.
Gjerdrum, C.,
G.M. Yanega and D.F. Bertram. 2006. Bill harnesses on nestling Tufted Puffins
influence adult provisioning behaviour. J. Field Ornithol. 77: 329-334.
Gurd, D.B. 2006.
Filter-feeding ducks (Anas) can actively select particles by size. Zool.
109: 120-126.
Heath, J.P.
2006. Quantifying temporal variability in population abundances. Oikos 115:
573-581.
Heath, J.P.,
H.G. Gilchrist and R.C. Ydenberg. 2006. Regulation of stroke pattern and swim
speed across a range of current velocities: diving by common eiders wintering
in polnyas in the Canadian Arctic. J. Exp. Biol. 209: 3974-3983.
Hipfner,
J.M., A.J. Gaston and B.D. Smith. 2006. Regulation of provisioning in the
Thick-billed Murre (Uria lomvia).
Kenyon, J.K.
2006. Use of vanishing bearings to locate new wading bird colonies. Waterbirds
29: 203-210.
Major, H.L.,
I.L. Jones, G.V. Byrd and J.C. Williams. 2006. Assessing the effects of introduced
Merkel, F.R.,
K. Falk and S.E. Jamieson. 2006. Impact on body condition of embedded lead shot
in Common Eiders Somateria mollissima. J. Wildl. Manage. 70:
1644-1646.
Morgan,
Muzaffar,
S.B., R.C. Ydenberg and I.L. Jones. 2006. Avian influenza: an ecological and
evolutionary perspective for waterbird scientists. Waterbirds 29:
243-257.
Niehaus, A.C.
and R.C. Ydenberg. 2006. Ecological factors associated with the breeding and
migratory phenology of high-latitude breeding western sandpipers. Polar Biology
DOI: 10.1007/s00300-006-0154-1.
Norris, D.R.
and C.M. Taylor. 2006. Predicting the consequences of carry-over effects on
migratory populations. Biol. Let. 2: 148-151.
Pomeroy,
A.C., R.W. Butler and R.C. Ydenberg. 2006. Experimental evidence that migrants
adjust usage at a stopover site to trade off food and danger. Behav. Ecol. 17:
1041-1045.
Rodway, M.S.
2006. Have winter spacing patterns of Harlequin Ducks been partially shaped by
sexual selection? Waterbirds 29: 415-426.
Sydeman,
W.J., R.W. Bradley, P. Warzybok, C.L. Abraham, J. Jahncke, K.D. Hyrenbach, V.
Kousky, J.M. Hipfner and M.D. Ohman. 2006. Planktivorous auklet Ptychoramphus
aleuticus responses to ocean climate 2005: Unusual atomspheric blocking?
Geophysical Research Letters 33, L22S09, DOI: 10.1029/2006GL026736.
Vézina, F.,
J.R. Speakman and T.D. Williams. 2006. Individually-variable energy management
strategies in relation to energetic costs of egg production. Ecology 87:
2447-2458.
White, A.F.,
J.P. Heath and B. Gisborne. 2006. Seasonal timing o f Bald Eagle attendance and
influence on activity budgets of Glaucous-winged Gulls in
Zydelis, R.,
D. Esler, W.S. Boyd, D. Lacroix and M. Kirk. 2006. Habitat use by wintering
surf and white-winged scoters: effects of environmental attributes and
shellfish aquaculture. J. Wildl. Manage. 70: 1754-1762.
Dale, J. In
press. Intraspecific variation in bird colors. In: Bird Coloration, Function
and Evolution, Hill, G.E.and K.J. McGraw, eds.
Galdikas,
B.M. and W.E. Davies. In press. Orangutan reproductive strategies: players,
tactics and games. In: All apes, great and small, eds.: Springer-Verlag.
Ydenberg,
R.C. In press. Provisioning. In: Foraging, Stephens, D.W., J. Brownand
R.C. Ydenberg, eds.
Ydenberg,
R.C., D.W. Stephens and J. Brown. In press. Foraging: an overview. In: Foraging,
Stephens, D.W., J. Brownand R.C. Ydenberg, eds.
Gilchrist,
H.G., J.P. Heath, L. Arragutainaq, G.J. Robertson, K. Allard, S. Gilliland and
M. Mallory. 2006. Combining science and local knowledge to study common eider
ducks wintering in
Stephens, D.W., J. Brown and R.C. Ydenberg. In press.
Foraging.
Lank, D.B. and S. Nebel. 2006. Cross-cutting research on a flyway
scale - beyond monitoring. In: Waterbirds Around the World, Boere,G.C.,
C.A.Galbraith and D.A. Stroud, eds. pp. 107-112.
Green, D.J. and S. Quinlan. 2007. Evaluating
the health of riparian habitats: water use decisions, density and breeding
performance of Yellow Warblers in Revelstoke Reach, B.C. Report to: Columbia
Basin Fish and Wildlife Compensation Program, BC. pp.
Davies, W.E.
2007. Reproductive foraging ecology of five sympatrically breeding Alcid
seabirds. MSc,
Kirk, M.
2006. Movement and foraging behaviours of Surf Scoters wintering in habitats
modified by shellfish aquaculture. MSc,
LeBourdais,
S.V. 2006. Harlequin duck (Histrionicus histrionicus) density on rivers
in southwestern
Middleton,
H.A. 2006. Post-fledging behaviour and dispersal in American dippers. MSc,
Pomeroy, A.C.
2006. Feeding and predation danger tradeoffs in stopover site usage by Western
Sandpipers (Calidris mauri). PhD,
Salvante,
K.G. 2006. What comes first, the Zebra Finch or the egg? Resource allocation
during avian egg production. PhD,