• Aucun résultat trouvé

Appendix 3.

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2022

Partager "Appendix 3."

Copied!
2
0
0

Texte intégral

(1)

Appendix 3. Figures showing difference in species richness and total number of birds between forest-edge autonomous recording unit (ARU) North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) and sunrise surveys at each BBS stop from three routes in the Northwest Territories, Canada.

Figure A3.1. Mean number of species detected at each BBS stop from forest-edge ARU-based surveys conducted in 2015 during traditional BBS time and sunrise on three routes conducted in the Northwest Territories, Canada. Solid and broken lines indicate Forest-edge ARU Sunrise and Forest-edge ARU BBS, respectively.

(2)

Figure A3.2. Mean total number of birds detected at each BBS stop from forest-edge ARU- based surveys conducted in 2015 during traditional BBS time and sunrise on three routes conducted in the Northwest Territories, Canada. Solid and broken lines indicate Forest-edge ARU Sunrise and Forest-edge ARU BBS, respectively.

Références

Documents relatifs

The result on species richness, distribution and substrate specificity of mushrooms widens the knowledge on mycodiversity and substrate relationship which is an important factor

We compared eBird and North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) data from southern Ontario to determine if patterns in annual indices and long-term trends were similar for 22

The BBS’s design, so carefully laid out half a century ago, has withstood and been strengthened by rigorous peer-review and ongoing developments in analysis methods, and has been

Finally the generating function for unrooted trees is given in terms of the function for rooted trees by an ap- propriate combination of the theorems of Otter

Trends in annual percent change between 1970 and 2015 and associated 95% confidence or credible intervals for models of eBird data in spring, fall, and winter, Breeding Bird

During a five-year study of the bird community in an experimental tropical forest restoration, we examined temporal trends in bird activity and diversity and the effects of

Percent difference (95% confidence interval [CI]) in relative abundance in counts from (1) human North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) and on-road autonomous recording unit

At the lowest red and roe deer population abundances (index < 10), we did not detect any difference in species richness for herbaceous and high shrub layer between inside and