Population size, distribution and habitat use of the Hawaiian Short-eared Owl (Asio flammeus sandwichensis) on O'ahu

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2018-01-31
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Melissa R. Price
Javier Cotin
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Abstract
The Pueo (Asio flammeus sandwichensis), once common across the Hawaiian Islands, is currently state-listed as Endangered on O'ahu. The Pueo provides important ecosystem services by controlling population sizes of introduced rodents and preying on other introduced and native species, including birds and invertebrates. As the only native raptor that breeds on the main Hawaiian Islands, the Pueo plays an important role in top-down ecological regulation and is also valued by native Hawaiians and other Hawai'i residents. Although the Pueo has been recorded in a variety of vegetation types in the Hawaiian archipelago, key habitat selection variables are still unknown. In this study, we optimized a survey methodology to improve population estimates and define vegetation types important to population stability and we compared distribution among vegetation types and overall population densities of Pueo with other Short-eared Owl populations across the globe. Three different approaches were used: (a) standardized surveys by trained personnel; (b) citizen science reports of Pueo sightings submitted to an online portal www.pueoproject.com; and (c) citizen science reports to eBird www.ebird.org, a publicly available, well-established, and curated international online portal for submitting bird sighting reports. We collected more than 50 Pueo sightings in one year through the Pueo project online portal, while the eBird portal collected 43 reports in three decades. Information gathered through the citizen science portal was highly valuable for obtaining phenology and breeding event observations (nests, owlet locations, display flights), however, data collected in this manner were biased due to the lack of standard distribution of the observers, which hampered their usefulness for running distribution models or other population analyses. During the standardized surveys Pueo were observed on agricultural lands, wetlands, short grasslands and open native vegetation. Pueo were detected, on average, 23 minutes before twilight. Estimated densities ranged from 0 to 3.3 Pueo per 100 ha across vegetation types, with most detections occurring in open vegetation types, such as agricultural lands, grasslands, and wetlands. Based on observed densities, the population of Pueo inhabiting O'ahu was estimated at 807 individuals, with 95% confidence intervals of 8 to 2199. Densities obtained from standardized, randomized surveys are aligned with those studies targeting known Short-eared Owl populations with a high rate of occupancy, which does not seem to be the situation on O'ahu, especially if we consider the high level of threats that this species faces in Hawai'i and the observations of declining populations that local inhabitants have reported in person or submitted to the Pueo Project portal. Densities on O'ahu are probably similar to the ones reported in non-targeted, randomized and standardized studies, where owls occupy territories with high prey availability, but leave unoccupied low-prey-density territories. Based on this information, we consider the most likely population number to be on the lower end of the estimated range of possibilities.
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Technical report prepared for the State of Hawaiʻi Department of Land & Natural Resources on population size, distribution and habitat use of the Hawaiian Short-eared Owl (Asio flammeus sandwichensis) on O'ahu
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Cotin J, Price MR. 2018. Population size, distribution and habitat use of the Hawaiian Short-eared Owl (Asio flammeus sandwichensis) on O'ahu. Technical report prepared for Hawaiʻi Department of Land & Natural Resources, Honolulu, HI.
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Technical Report
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Honolulu, HI
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