The Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survivorship (MAPS) Program was created by The Institute for Bird Populations in 1989 to assess and monitor the vital rates and population dynamics of over 120 species of North American landbirds in order to provide critical conservation and management information on their populations. The MAPS Program utilizes constant-effort mist netting and banding at a continent-wide network of monitoring stations staffed by both professional biologists and highly trained volunteers.
MAPS Materials - manuals and forms for MAPS operators.
MAPS Tables of Results - view MAPS
productivity indices and survivorship estimates covering the period
1992-2001 and station information covering the period 1989-2001. Previously
these indices and estimates have been available only in IBP's peer-reviewed
publication, Bird Populations.
MAPS Chat - see recent newsletters:
MAPS Chat - Spring 2007
MAPS Chat - Spring 2004
Color Images used in Spring 2004 MAPS Chat
MAPS Chat - Spring 2002
MAPS article and video - read the story of one MAPS station and see station operations in action by clicking the video icon at the end of the article.
MAPS is organized around research and management goals as well as
monitoring goals. MAPS data are used to describe temporal and spatial
patterns in the vital rates of target species, and relationships between
these patterns and
- ecological characteristics and population trends of the target species
- station-specific and landscape-level habitat characteristics
- spatially explicit weather variables.
Information from these patterns and relationships are then used to
- identify the causes of population declines
- formulate management actions and conservation strategies to reverse declines, and maintain healthy populations
- evaluate the effectiveness of management actions and conservation strategies.
Since its first season, MAPS has grown from 16 to over 500 stations
and has received the support and endorsement of many federal agencies
and conservation groups, including the USDA
Forest Service, the National Park Service,
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the
Biological Resources Division of the USGS,
the Department of Defense Legacy
Resource Management Program, the National
Audubon Society, and the international cooperative Neotropical
Migratory Bird Conservation Initiative, "Partners
in Flight."
During the past 11 years, the MAPS Program has produced 25 peer-reviewed scientific papers, 22 manuals, handbooks, and non-peer-reviewed position papers, and 109 technical (mostly annual) reports to federal and state agencies and private organizations. MAPS data have been used in a number of conservation and management planning documents, including land management planning on DoD military installations in the Midwest and Texas, timber sale plans on national forests in Oregon and Washington, and the Sierra Nevada Ecosystem Project, a report solicited by the United States Congress.
Here we provide a 2001 overview of the MAPS program ...
Download this entire paper as a .pdf document or read on-line
I. WHY MONITOR VITAL RATES?
II. OVERVIEW OF THE MAPS PROGRAM
III. GOALS AND OBJECTIVES OF MAPS
IV. RECENT IMPORTANT RESULTS FROM THE MAPS PROGRAM
V. MAPS 5-YEAR PLAN AND OBJECTIVES FOR THE NEXT 3 YEARS
VI. LITERATURE CITED