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Research on Golden-winged Warblers: Recent progress and current needs

July 13, 2016

Considerable advances have been made in knowledge about Golden-winged Warblers (Vermivora chrysoptera) in the past decade. Recent employment of molecular analysis, stable-isotope analysis, telemetry-based monitoring of survival and behavior, and spatially explicit modeling techniques have added to, and revised, an already broad base of published knowledge. Here, we synthesize findings primarily from recent peer-reviewed literature on Golden-winged Warblers, from this volume and elsewhere, and we identify some of the substantial remaining research needs. We have organized this synthesis by stages of the Golden-winged Warbler annual cycle. First, we discuss the relatively well-studied breeding-grounds ecology including nesting and post-fledging ecology and hybridization with closely related Blue-winged Warblers (Vermivora cyanoptera). Second, we discuss the much-less-studied, non-breeding-grounds ecology, including the first empirical studies of non-breeding-grounds cover-type associations and spatial and social behavioral ecology. Third, we address migratory connectivity and migration ecology, for which little is known and research has only just begun. Last, we close with cautious optimism that current knowledge is adequate to inform initial conservation and management plans for Golden-winged Warblers, and with a sobering acknowledgement of the quantity of research still needed.

Publication Year 2016
Title Research on Golden-winged Warblers: Recent progress and current needs
Authors Henry M. Streby, Roland W. Rohrbaugh, David A. Buehler, David E. Andersen, Rachel Vallender, David I. King, Tom Will
Publication Type Book Chapter
Publication Subtype Book Chapter
Series Title Studies in Avian Biology
Index ID 70189730
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Coop Res Unit Leetown