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1 March 2011 Common Grackle Breeding on Bottomland Forest Restoration Sites
Daniel J. Twedt
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Abstract

Two of 36 forest restoration sites in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley surveyed from 2000–2002 harbored Quiscalus quiscula (Common Grackle). Occupied sites were in less-forested landscapes and had sparser understory vegetation due to flooding. Probability of daily nest survival (0.9077) of 169 Common Grackle nests was influenced by nest-placement, temporal, and landscape effects. Age of nest markedly affected nest survival, which increased from <0.89 during egg laying (age < 6 days) to >0.92 when nestlings were present (age > 18 days). Extrapolating daily nest survival to a 31 -day nest period resulted in 5% nest success, far less then previously estimated for this species in more northern latitudes and likely less than required to sustain populations on these sites.

Daniel J. Twedt "Common Grackle Breeding on Bottomland Forest Restoration Sites," Southeastern Naturalist 10(1), 1-10, (1 March 2011). https://doi.org/10.1656/058.010.0101
Published: 1 March 2011
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