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Nesting territory occupancy by Aplomado Falcons in coastal Texas, 2008-2012.

Nesting territory occupancy by Aplomado Falcons in coastal Texas, 2008-2012.

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DEVOLVIENDO A FALCO FEMORALIS A LOS ESTADOS UNIDOS Se liberaron volantones de Falco femoralis criados en cautiverio a lo largo de las planicies costeras del sur de Texas (839 aves de 21 sitios durante 1993–2004) y en el desierto de Chihuahua del oeste de Texas (637 aves de 11 sitios durante 2002–2011) y del sur de Nuevo México (337 aves de 10 sitio...

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... rates of the Brownsville population in 2012 and 2013, the first estimates since 2006, were 1.60 and 1.93 fledglings per nesting attempt. We found fewer pairs in 2012 and 2013 than in all previous years of survey (Table 1), and overall, during the past 7 yr there has been an increased proportion of single adult females on territory, as well as females paired with juvenile males, suggesting a deficit in male recruits. ...
Context 2
... population. The number of pairs on Mata- gorda Island has remained more or less constant for almost a decade (Table 1). Matagorda Island is part of the Aransas NWR, with a small area on the northern end administered by the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. ...

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... Whooping cranes that utilize ANWR tend to not be observed in areas of dense live oak woodland and shrubland (Golden et al. 2022). Continuous prescribed burns help set back vegetation to early successional stages and lower overall plant height as whooping cranes prefer unobstructed views that allow for predator detection (Armbruster 1990), roosting, and foraging (Lewis 1995) as do Aplomado falcons for hunting prey and breeding, particularly on Matagorda Island (Perez et al. 1996;Macías-Duarte et al. 2004;Hunt et al. 2013). Using LANDFIRE intervals to guide prescribed burning may be detrimental to whooping crane management, and it is likely that the open habitat critical to both whooping cranes and Aplomado falcons use of the refuge would be lost to woody plant encroachment. ...
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Background The southeastern United States consists of diverse ecosystems, many of which are fire-dependent. Fires were common during pre-European times, and many were anthropogenic in origin. Understanding how prescribed burning practices in use today compare to historic fire regimes can provide perspective and context on the role of fire in critical ecosystems. On the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), prescribed burning is conducted to prevent live oak ( Quercus fusiformis ) encroachment and preserve the openness of the herbaceous wetlands and grasslands for endangered whooping cranes ( Grus americana ) and Aplomado falcons ( Falco femoralis ). This field note builds a digital fire atlas of recent prescribed burning on the refuge and compares it to the historical fire ecology of ANWR. Results Findings indicate that the refuge is maintaining fire-dependent ecosystems with an extensive burn program that includes a fire return interval between 2 and 10 years on a majority of the refuge, with some locations experiencing much longer intervals. These fire return intervals are much shorter than the historic burn regime according to LANDFIRE. Conclusions Following the fire return intervals projected by LANDFIRE, which project longer intervals than the prescribed fire program, would likely be detrimental to endangered species management by allowing increased woody plant encroachment and loss of open habitat important to whooping cranes and Aplomado falcons. Since prescribed fire is part of the management objectives on many national wildlife refuges in the United States, quantifying recent and historical fire ecology can provide useful insights into future management efforts, particularly in cases where endangered species are of special concern and management efforts may be counter to historical disturbance regimes.
... The Northern Aplomado Falcon (Falco femoralis septentrionalis), hereafter Aplomado Falcon, declined before ultimately disappearing from the United States in the 1950's, likely from a combination of habitat loss and indiscriminate use of the pesticides dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) and dieldrin (Hunt et al., 2013). Habitat changes in the Aplomado Falcon's range in Texas also contributed to the declines of other prairie and grassland dwelling species, including the Attwater's Prairie Chicken (Tympnuchus cupido attwateri) and Pronghorn (Antilocapra americana) (Lehmann, 1941;Simpson, Harveson, Brewer, Walser, & Sides, 2007). ...
... Historically, this subspecies was a year-round resident of the southwestern United States (Ligon, 1961;Hector, 1987) and northern Mexico south to Belize and Guatemala, but was extirpated in the United States by the 1950s (Kiff and Peakall, 1980). Causes of population declines are uncertain but are thought to have resulted from the conversion of open grasslands to agriculture and brushlands, leading to increased predator populations and suppressed fire regimes (Hunt et al., 2013). Releases of captive-reared individuals into coastal South Texas began in 1985 but failed to reestablish the population until additional releases occurred during 1993-2004. ...
... Releases of captive-reared individuals into coastal South Texas began in 1985 but failed to reestablish the population until additional releases occurred during 1993-2004. The population has appeared stable at roughly 35 pairs since the bulk of releases ceased in 2004 (Jenny et al., 2004;Hunt et al., 2013;McClure et al., 2017a). The Peregrine Fund has been intensively monitoring the population since 1993. ...
... Habitat at Matagorda Island included gulf cordgrass, marsh hay cordgrass (S. patens), gulf dune paspalum (Paspalum monostachyum), and gulf bluestem (Schizachyrium maritimum). Aplomado Falcons reuse nests built by other large birds and establish nests in wild vegetation including tree-yucca (principally Yucca treculeana), honey mesquite (Prosopis glandulosa), spiny hackberry (Celtis ehrenbergiana), along with other species of vegetation (summarized by Hunt et al., 2013). The falcons often also nest in suitable human-constructed artificial nest structures (Hunt et al., 2013). ...
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We examined long-term demography of an endangered subspecies, the Northern Aplomado Falcon (Falco femoralis septentrionalis), in South Texas, USA. The population has been managed and monitored since reintroductions began in 1993. Data spanning 1993–2018 enabled us to build an integrated population model (IPM) and a Cormack-Jolly-Seber model to estimate survival for three life stages (first-year, non-breeders, and breeders) and both sexes, abundance of males, fecundity, immigration, and emigration. Male falcons survived at lower rates than females during their first year; Hurricane Harvey caused a decline in survival rates of first-years and breeders; and fecundity increased after 2011 coinciding with changes in management focused on improving nest platforms and habitat quality. Both immigration of non-breeders and emigration were likely negligible for this population suggesting a potentially isolated population. The IPM likely overestimated immigration of breeders warranting further research. Population growth rates were greatest during years having more released captive-reared young and greater probabilities of breeder survival. Importantly, an apparent decrease in breeder survival of unknown cause occurred during 2006 to 2009 when breeder survival declined and remained low for several years. Our ability to identify the cause for reduced survival is now greatly hampered by the extended time that has passed, limiting the usefulness of our recent awareness of reduced survival for informing management and further highlighting the importance of real-time monitoring for proactive decision making processes. Our study greatly improves knowledge of demographics for a reintroduced, isolated, and intensively managed population of Aplomado Falcons. Applying this IPM to new data each year will enable adaptive management of the South Texas population by providing annual evaluations of vital rates along with revised assessments of monitoring and management.
... However, the four reintroduced populations are exhibiting very different trajectories, despite being established using the same suite of management techniques. Although this is not unique in small falcon recovery programmes, as shown by the mixed success with the reintroduction of the Aplomado Falcon Falco femoralis in south and west Texas (USA) (Hunt et al. 2013), our long-term monitoring programme allowed us comprehensively to explore the reasons behind these different trajectories. ...
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... The current conservation status of the Aplomado Falcon in the Chihuahuan Desert is nebulous. Aplomado Falcons of unknown origin were observed in New Mexico and west Texas before and after the decade-long reintroduction program (2002( -2012( , Hunt et al. 2013, and in Chihuahua and San Luis Potosí after 2009 (eBird 2020). Almost no recruitment of Aplomado Falcons in the Chihuahuan Desert has been documented outside the central Chihuahua population, with the exception of a few successful nesting attempts by captive-raised birds (Hunt et al. 2013) and by wild birds (Meyers andWilliams 2005, USFWS 2014). ...
... Aplomado Falcons of unknown origin were observed in New Mexico and west Texas before and after the decade-long reintroduction program (2002( -2012( , Hunt et al. 2013, and in Chihuahua and San Luis Potosí after 2009 (eBird 2020). Almost no recruitment of Aplomado Falcons in the Chihuahuan Desert has been documented outside the central Chihuahua population, with the exception of a few successful nesting attempts by captive-raised birds (Hunt et al. 2013) and by wild birds (Meyers andWilliams 2005, USFWS 2014). Aplomado Falcons probably nest in other parts of the Chihuahuan Desert that have not been surveyed during the breeding season. ...
... Determining availability of suitable habitat for the Aplomado Falcon elsewhere in the Chihuahuan Desert has been difficult. For instance, reintroductions of captive-bred falcons to potential breeding habitat failed to establish breeding territories in the Chihuahuan Desert grasslands of New Mexico and west Texas (Hunt et al. 2013). In addition, several authors have retrospectively identified breeding habitat in Chihuahua, Mexico, and New Mexico and west Texas, USA (Young et al. 2002, Zamarron Rodríguez 2003, Lanser 2003, Rodríguez Salazar 2004, Swiekert and Phillips 2015 and the rest of Mexico (Keddy- Hector et al. 2014) using satellite imagery. ...
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The persistence of a species throughout its geographic range requires dispersal among its populations. The study of dispersal is particularly relevant for species whose geographic range has contracted, such as the endangered Northern Aplomado Falcon (Falco femoralis septentrionalis). We used Argos 5-g PTT-100 satellite transmitters to determine the movements of two wild Chihuahuan Desert Aplomado Falcons (one female and one male) from fledging to breeding (male), or transmitter failure (female), at 1062 d and 439 d of age, respectively. Both falcons dispersed from their natal territories 2-3 mo after fledging. These falcons then wandered between activity centers near historic breeding territories and some territories recently converted to farmlands. These two falcons also explored areas outside known breeding areas via some long-distance movements to areas of potential breeding habitat being converted to farmland. In 2 yr, movements of the male covered 7412 sq. km. This falcon nested unsuccessfully with an unbanded female in a vacant breeding territory 15 km from his natal site. His nesting attempt the following year yielded two fledglings. While a breeding bird, the male falcon had a home range of 200 sq. km. For 17 mo, the female falcon wandered through an area of 12,136 sq. km. The farthest distance she traveled from her nest site prior to transmitter failure was 154 km.
... The subspecies has declined significantly in abundance over the past century, with the last breeding pair in the USA (prior to captive release efforts initiated in the mid-1980s) observed in the wild in 1952 (Hunt et al. 2013). Although the species' overall geographic distribution extends south through Mexico to Argentina, the distribution of the most northern subspecies (F. ...
... The captive population was created with the intention to propagate and release captive-hatched individuals in an effort to restore the species to its original range within the southern USA. The first captive-hatched Aplomado Falcons were produced in 1982 (Cade et al. 1991) and the first were released to the wild in 1985 (Hunt et al. 2013). All released Aplomado Falcons were offspring of the 27 founders or their subsequent generations that were reared and bred in captivity. ...
... Although substantial effort was made in an attempt to establish a breeding population in West Texas and New Mexico, only one nesting pair was observed in New Mexico after 2012 despite the release of 637 captive-hatched Aplomado Falcons in West Texas between 2002 and 2011, and more than 337 in New Mexico between 2006 and 2012 (Hunt et al. 2013, USFWS 2014. The exact reason the released Aplomado Falcons failed to establish is not fully known, but multiple years of severe drought and deterioration of ground cover likely decreased prey availability, which in turn likely decreased the population's productivity during the reintroduction efforts (Hunt et al. 2013, Sweikert andPhillips 2015). ...
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Reintroductions are an important tool in conservation for preserving and enhancing biodiversity and preventing extinction, and post-release monitoring is essential to evaluate and inform conservation management and maximize recovery success. By quantifying genetic diversity levels and effective population size (Ne) over time, managers can gauge to what degree additional efforts are needed to increase the likelihood of population persistence. The endangered Northern Aplomado Falcon (Falco femoralis septentrionalis) population in South Texas was reestablished and supplemented with captive-bred individuals originating from 27 founders collected in eastern Mexico (San Luis Potosí, Veracruz, Tabasco, and Chiapas). A total of 927 Aplomado Falcons were released at 23 locations along the southern coast of Texas between 1985 and 2004, and in 2012 and 2013. To assess the species' reintroduction and recovery, we applied a genetic monitoring approach using sampled nestlings (n = 267) from a total of 108 nests in 2004–2005 and 2012–2016. Based on ten microsatellite loci, levels of genetic diversity (i.e., allelic richness and heterozygosity) remained stable over the sampled time period, with no indication of inbreeding. Diversity levels were comparable to a subset of samples collected from the captive population founders (n = 11). Similarly, individuals from the South Texas population showed strong admixture with the founding population, and levels of both Ne and of effective breeding (Nb) showed no signs of decline over the sampled time period. To what degree overlapping generations and the release of additional Aplomado Falcons during the sampled time period limited our assessment of the South Texas population is not fully known. Continued monitoring across multiple generations is advisable to assess the population's ability to persist.
... Reintroduction of Peregrines in Eastern USA restored the species to a large geographical region where breeding had ceased due to pesticide poisoning (Cade & Burnham 2003). Conversely, attempts to re-establish extinct populations of Aplomado Falcons Falco femoralis in Southern USA were less successful, where failures were attributed to climate conditions and habitat changes with associated high predation rates and prey loss (Hunt et al. 2013). On-going efforts to re-establish locally adapted, tree-nesting populations of Peregrines have had varying degrees of success (Kirmse 2001, Sielicki & Sielicki 2009). ...
... A consequence of the imbalanced operational sex ratio was that λ obs of our study population was 13% lower than that predicted solely by the female-based demographic model. We suspect this may not be uncommon in the Accipitriformes, as well as in other orders of raptors with similar selection pressures on age at first breeding (e.g., Hunt et al. 2013). Typically, researchers employ femalebased demographic models in population studies of raptors (Lahaye et al. 1994, Katzner et al. 2006, Ortega et al. 2009, Krüger et al. 2010, Hernández-Matías et al. 2013, Monzón and Friedenberg 2018. ...
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Life-history theory predicts individuals should breed as soon as they are able to reproduce, but many long-lived birds delay breeding. In the Accipitriformes, delayed breeding is the norm, and age when breeding begins is influenced by competing selective pressures. In most Accipitriformes, the reproductive roles of males and females differ; males do most of the foraging and females tend eggs and young. Thus, sexual differences in age at first breeding might be expected, but these differences, possible causes, and implications for individual fitness have received little study. We investigated sexual differences in age at first breeding in a marked population of Cooper’s Hawks (Accipiter cooperii) from 2011 through 2018 in central New Mexico, USA. We hypothesized that males required more experience to pair and breed successfully than females, and we predicted: (1) a lower mean age at first breeding for females than males, and (2) that expected individual fitness of early-breeding males would be lower than for early-breeding females. We found that 79% more females than males bred in their first year (hatching year, HY), and expected individual fitness of HY-breeding females was 21% greater than for HY-breeding males. HY males that attempted to breed settled on nesting territories with exceptionally high prey abundance, nevertheless they experienced 37% lower second-year survival than males that delayed breeding. Females competed for mates based on male age. HY females that paired with relatively older males had 33% higher second-year survival and 16% higher expected individual fitness than HY females that initially paired with relatively younger males. The observed annual rate of growth (λ) of our study population was 1.08, closer to λ predicted by male (1.02) than female (1.21) demographic models. Delayed breeding by males thus had important ramifications for λ, highlighting the need to consider sexual differences in age at first breeding in demographic analyses.
... This is particularly relevant to F. f. septentrionalis because, during 1985-2013, 1,893 captive-reared southern Mexican Aplomado Falcons were released in Texas and New Mexico. A surviving population of c.40 resident pairs in southern Texas is now managed to maximise productivity (Hunt et al. 2013). Many of these birds were released in close proximity to extant populations in Chihuahua and southern New Mexico. ...
... Durante estas investigaciones se detectó una severa contaminación por DDT en Veracruz, lo que provocaba un adelgazamiento de los cascarones de los huevos y obstaculizaba los esfuerzos del programa de reintroducción (Kiff et al., 1980). A la par de estas investigaciones, entre 1977 y 1988, el Chihuahuan Desert Institute y The Peregrine Fund llevaron a cabo la colecta de crías para iniciar con un programa de reproducción en cautiverio (Hunt, 2013). En el año de 1993 se realizaron las primeras liberaciones de Halcones Aplomados en el sur de Texas, las cuales continuaron hasta el año 2012 con liberaciones en el Desierto Chihuahuense en el oeste de Texas y sur de Nuevo México (Hunt, 2013). ...
... A la par de estas investigaciones, entre 1977 y 1988, el Chihuahuan Desert Institute y The Peregrine Fund llevaron a cabo la colecta de crías para iniciar con un programa de reproducción en cautiverio (Hunt, 2013). En el año de 1993 se realizaron las primeras liberaciones de Halcones Aplomados en el sur de Texas, las cuales continuaron hasta el año 2012 con liberaciones en el Desierto Chihuahuense en el oeste de Texas y sur de Nuevo México (Hunt, 2013). ...
... Sin embargo, después de la liberación de 974 individuos en el transcurso de 11 años (2002)(2003)(2004)(2005)(2006)(2007)(2008)(2009)(2010)(2011)(2012) por parte de The Peregrine Fund en Nuevo México y en el oeste de Texas, aun no existe evidencia de que al menos una pareja de halcones se esté reproduciendo como resultado de dichas liberaciones en el Desierto Chihuahuense. Sin embargo, las 839 liberaciones realizadas igualmente por The Peregrine Fund en las sabanas costeras del sur de Texas (1993Texas ( -2004 fueron más exitosas, logrando el establecimiento de más de 30 parejas reproductivas en el área (Hunt et al., 2013). ...