Habitat Distribution and Territoriality In the Dickcissel and Red-Winged Blackbird
byKenneth L. Petersen
A National Science Foundation - UndergraduateResearch Participation Project
June 5 - August 11, 1978
Kansas State University
Manhattan, Kansas
This resource is based on the following source:
Petersen, Kenneth L. 1978. Habitat distribution and territoriality in the dickcissel and red-winged blackbird. National Science Foundation, Undergraduate Research Participation Project. Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas. 37pp.This resource should be cited as:
Petersen, Kenneth L. 1978. Habitat distribution and territoriality in the dickcissel and red-winged blackbird. National Science Foundation, Undergraduate Research Participation Project. Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas. 37pp. Jamestown, ND: Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center Online. http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/birds/dickhab/index.htm (Version 02JUL99).
Table of Contents
Figures
{Editor's Note: The graphs have been created using information obtained from the author's hand-drawn figures. The information contained in them may not be exact.}
- Figure 1. -- Dickcissel densities vs. time
- Figure 2. -- Dickcissel sex ratios vs. density
- Figure 3. -- Dickcissel territory size vs. density
- Figure 4. -- Redwing densities vs. time
- Figure 5. -- Redwing sex ratios vs. density
- Figure 6. -- Redwing territory size vs. density
Tables
- Table 1. -- Breeding Success of Dickcissels
- Table 2. -- Dickcissel Sex Ratios (Female/Male)
- Table 3. -- Territory Sizes (Mean Acres ± S.E.) of Male Dickcissels
- Table 4. -- July 14 Oldfield Vegetation Heights (Mean cm. ± S.E.)
- Table 5. -- Breeding Success of Red-Winged Blackbirds
- Table 6. -- Redwing Sex Ratios (Female/Male)
- Table 7. -- Territory Sizes (Mean Acres ± S.E.) of Male Redwings
- Table 8. -- July 14 Oldfield Vegetation Heights (Mean cm. ± S.E.)
Acknowledgements
This study would not have been possible without the financial support of the National Science Foundation, which is gratefully acknowledged. I thank Elmer Fink for collecting the vegetation height data. Breeding success data was provided by Charles Facemire. Stephen Bump, Roger Packard, and Charles Facemire helped in setting up grids. Sincere gratitude is expressed to my faculty advisor, Dr. John Zimmerman, and to Dr. Steve Fretwell for their patience and their many helpful suggestions and criticisms which helped to make the summer's work a very rewarding experience.Downloading Instructions -- Instructions on downloading and extracting files from this site.
dickhab.zip (151K) -- Habitat Distribution and Territoriality In the Dickcissel and Red-Winged Blackbird
Installation: Extract all files and open index.htm in a web browser.