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" Avian Communities in Tidal Salt Marshes of San Francisco Bay: A Review of Functional Groups by Foraging Guild and Habitat Association "


Document Type : AL
Record Number : 926586
Doc. No : LA3tg4f18n
Language of Document : English
Main Entry : Takekawa, John Y.; Woo, Isa; Gardiner, Rachel; Casazza, Michael; Ackerman, Joshua T.; Nur, Nadav; Liu, Leonard; Spautz, Hildie; lt;a href="" class="c-authorlist__list-more-link"gt;et al.lt;/agt;
Title & Author : Avian Communities in Tidal Salt Marshes of San Francisco Bay: A Review of Functional Groups by Foraging Guild and Habitat Association [Article]\ Takekawa, John Y.; Woo, Isa; Gardiner, Rachel; Casazza, Michael; Ackerman, Joshua T.; Nur, Nadav; Liu, Leonard; Spautz, Hildie; a hrefet al./a
Title of Periodical : San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
Volume/ Issue Number : 9/3
Date : 2011
Abstract : The San Francisco Bay estuary is highly urbanized, but it supports the largest remaining extent of tidal salt marshes on the west coast of North America as well as a diverse native bird community. San Francisco Bay tidal marshes are occupied by more than 113 bird species that represent 31 families, including five subspecies from three families that we denote as tidal-marsh obligates. To better identify the niche of bird species in tidal marshes, we present a review of functional groups based on foraging guilds and habitat associations. Foraging guilds describe the method by which species obtain food from tidal marshes, while habitat associations describe broad areas within the marsh that have similar environmental conditions. For example, the ubiquitous song sparrows (Alameda Melospiza melodia pusillula, Suisun M. m. maxillaris, and San Pablo M. m. samuelis) are surface-feeding generalists that consume prey from vegetation and the ground, and they are found across the entire marsh plain into the upland–marsh transition. In contrast, surface-feeding California black rails (Laterallus jamaicensis coturniculus) are cryptic, and generally restricted in their distribution to the mid- and high-marsh plain. Although in the same family, the endangered California clapper rail (Rallus longirostris obsoletus) has become highly specialized, foraging primarily on benthic fauna within marsh channels when they are exposed at low tide. Shorebirds such as the black-necked stilt (Himantopus mexicanus) typically probe in mud flats to consume macroinvertebrate prey, and are generally restricted to foraging on salt pans within the marsh plain, in ponds, or on mud flats during transitional stages of marsh evolution. The abundance and distribution of birds varies widely with changing water depths and vegetation colonization during different stages of restoration. Thus, tidal-marsh birds represent a rich and diverse community in bay marshes, with niches that may be distinguished by the food resources they consume and the habitats that they occupy along the tidal gradient.
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3tg4f18n_11392.pdf
3tg4f18n.pdf
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