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1 November 2012 Migrating Birds' use of Stopover Habitat in The Southwestern United States
Janet M. Ruth, Robert H. Diehl, Rodney K. Felix
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Abstract

In the arid Southwest, migratory birds are known to use riparian stopover habitats; we know less about how migrants use other habitat types during migratory stopover. Using radar data and satellite land-cover data, we determined the habitats with which birds are associated during migration stopover. Bird densities differed significantly by habitat type at all sites in at least one season. In parts of Arizona and New Mexico upland forest supported high densities of migrants, especially in fall. Developed habitat, in areas with little upland forest, also supported high densities of migrants. Scrub/shrub and grassland habitats supported low to intermediate densities, but because these habitat types dominate the Southwestern landscape, they may provide stopover habitat for larger numbers of migratory birds than previously recognized. These results are complicated by continuing challenges related to target identity (i.e., distinguishing among birds, arthropods and bats). Our results suggest that it is too simplistic to (1) consider the arid West as a largely inhospitable landscape in which there are only relatively small oases of habitat that provide the resources needed by all migrants, (2) think of western riparian and upland forests as supporting the majority of migrants in all cases, and (3) consider a particular habitat unimportant for stopover solely on the basis of low densities of migrants.

© 2012 by The Cooper Ornithological Society. All rights reserved. Please direct all requests for permission to photocopy or reproduce article content through the University of California Press's Rights and Permissions website, http://www.ucpressjournals.com/reprintInfo.asp.
Janet M. Ruth, Robert H. Diehl, and Rodney K. Felix "Migrating Birds' use of Stopover Habitat in The Southwestern United States," The Condor 114(4), 698-710, (1 November 2012). https://doi.org/10.1525/cond.2012.120020
Received: 7 February 2012; Accepted: 11 April 2012; Published: 1 November 2012
KEYWORDS
bird migration
borderlands
radar
southwest
stopover habitat use
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