Role of Wetlands and Endogenous Factors on Incubation Behavior of Nesting Spectacled Eiders on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska


Book Description

"Patterns of nest attendance in ducks vary with endogenous and environmental factors. We examined variation in nest attendance of spectacled eiders on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska, during 1997-1998. We also examined spatial and temporal variation in wetland characteristics and potential foods available to nesting spectacled eiders. Time spent foraging was greater when spectacled eiders traveled farther to feed, and nest attendance was lower when food was more abundant, suggesting that females made tradeoffs between foraging and energetic requirements of nesting in response to food abundance and wetland conditions. Wetlands were dynamic, and food abundance varied with pond depth and total dissolved solids. Spectacled eiders responded in complex ways to a suite of physiological and environmental variables, and employed an overall behavioral strategy that optimized foraging behavior in response to food abundance, while minimizing risk of depleting nutrient reserves sufficiently to force nest abandonment or increase the risk of female mortality"--Leaf iii.




Population Dynamics of Greater Scaup Breeding on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska


Book Description

"Populations of greater scaup (Aythya marila) remained relatively stable during a period when populations of lesser scaup (A. affinis) have declined from historic levels. To assist in describing these differences in population trends, from 1991 through 2000, we studied survival, nesting, ecology, and productivity of greater scaup on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta (Y-K Delta), Alaska, to develop a model of population dynamics. We located nests, radio-marked females for renesting studies, estimated duckling survival, and leg-banded females to examine nest site fidelity and annual survival"--Page 1.










Habitat Use of Spectacled Eider Broods in Relation to Salinity and Food Availability on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska


Book Description

Spectacled eiders (Somateria fischeri) nest and raise their broods in coastal areas of the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, which may be vulnerable to projected climate change effects of increased temperatures, storms, and sea level rise. These changes in turn will likely affect wetland salinity levels used by ducklings, which are a potential constraint to growth and survival of young ducklings while their salt glands develop. To examine this potential concern, I investigated spatial and temporal pond salinity dynamics, food availability, and habitat use of spectacled eider broods at Kigigak Island, AK during 2011-2012. I found that salinity was highly variable across the island, ranging from 0-23.9 ppt and averaged 4.9-12.9 ppt in ponds at brood observation sites during the first 30 days of brood rearing. Salinity typically increased through the summer across all habitat types, but at the highest rate in high sedge habitat. The most common invertebrate taxonomic groups included Eurytemora, Harpacticoida, Annelida, and Chironomidae, which were found in nearly all ponds sampled with salinity ranging from 0.7- 16.1 ppt. Neither salinity nor invertebrate abundance explained pond foraging use by broods. Additionally, I used robust design occupancy models to estimate brood foraging patterns. Pond occupancy ranged from 0.43-0.59 between years. Overall, brood use of ponds was not dictated by salinity levels or invertebrates present, suggesting that most ponds provide suitable brood rearing habitat. I did not detect any obvious constraint to pond use within brood rearing habitat under the environmental conditions encountered.




Nest Population Size and Potential Production of Geese and Spectacled Eiders on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska, 1985-2011


Book Description

Provides statistical data from ground-based surveys taken to estimate numbers of nests and eggs of geese and eiders in the Yukon-Kuskokwim delta from 1985 to 2011. Of 85 plots, 82 were sampled in June 2011 in a ground survey in the Hazen Bay coastal region (from Kigigak Island to Kashunuk River). Complete statistics are given for cackling goose, emperor goose, greater white-fronted goose, black brant, tundra swan, sandhill crane, spectacled eider, common eider, glaucous gull, mew gull, Sabine's gull, arctic tern, red-throated loon, and Pacific loon. Additional statistics (on nest initiation and hatch date) are given for greater scaup/long-tailed duck, pintail/shoveler/mallard/teal, and small shorebirds and statistics for fox and vole signs.




Nest Population Size and Potential Production of Geese and Spectacled Eiders on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska, 1985-2010


Book Description

Provides statistical data from ground-based surveys taken to estimate numbers of nests and eggs of geese and eiders in the Yukon-Kuskokwim delta from 1985 to 2010. Of 85 plots, 66 were sampled in 2010 in a ground survey in the Hazen Bay coastal region (from Kigigak Island to Kashunuk River). Statistics cover cackling goose, emperor goose, greater white-fronted goose, black brant, tundra swan, sandhill crane, spectacled eider, common eider, Pacific loon, red-throated loon, glaucous gull, mew gull, Sabine's gull, and arctic tern.




Nest Population Size and Potential Production of Geese and Spectacled Eiders on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska, 1985-2014


Book Description

Provides statistical data based on ground-based nest surveys on population status, egg production, nesting effort, phenology, habitat use, and predation for the cackling Canada goose, emperor goose, greater white-fronted goose, and spectacled eider. The survey also provides statistics for the black brant, tundra swan, sandhill crane, common eider, Pacific loon, red-throated loon, glaucous gull, mew gull, Sabine's gull, and arctic tern.




Nest Population Size and Potential Production of Geese and Spectacled Eiders on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska, 1985-2012


Book Description

Provides statistical data based on ground-based nest surveys on population status, egg production, nesting effort, phenology, habitat use, and predation for the cackling Canada goose, emperor goose, greater white-fronted goose, and spectacled eider. The survey also provides statistics for the tundra swan, sandhill crane, common eider, Pacific loon, red-throated loon, glaucous gull, mew gull, Sabine's gull, and arctic tern.




Nest Population Size and Potential Production of Geese and Spectacled Eiders on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska, 2005


Book Description

Some 85 plots were sampled in a ground survey in the Hazen Bay region (from Kigigak Island to Kashunuk River) in order to determine potential production of waterbirds, especially geese and eiders. In this Yukon-Kuskokwim delta coastal zone the increase of spectacled eider was estimated to be 29% higher since 2004. Geese production was good. Statistics include cackling goose, emperor goose, white-fronted goose, black brant, tundra swan, sandhill crane, spectacled eider, common eider, Pacific loon, red-throated loon, glaucous gull, mew gull, Sabine's gull, and arctic tern.