Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Northern Spotted Owls are only found in the Pacific Northwest section of the USA and are dependent on older forest habitat for their survival....................The ever-shrinking acreage of this biome(logging, fire, development) encouraged the USFW Service in the mid 1990's to list the Owls as "threatened under the Endangered Species Act .............."Even with this protection, mangers and ecologists are surprised NSO populations are decreasing at a greater rate than anticipated"..............."The reason?".......... "The northern spotted owls are not alone in their forests"................ "Barred owls began to invade the northern portion of spotted owl's range about 50 years ago and existed in low numbers in back in the mid 90's"............"However today, 20 years later, throughout their range from Canada to California, Northern spotted owls are under siege from Barred Owls:............."The Spotted Owls are disappearing three times faster than biologists had feared"............."Populations in parts of Washington are half what they were in the 1980s"............."So few birds remain in British Columbia that the provincial government plans to cage the last 16 known wild spotted owls and try to breed them in captivity"............."No one knows precisely why the bigger birds came West"............."Barred owls originally ranged from Florida to Maine and west to the treeless expanse of the Great Plains"............."Sometime in the 20th century, the birds skipped west, possibly across Canada"................"Perhaps they followed settlers who suppressed fire, allowing trees to grow and providing nesting pockets".............."While Barred owls have yet to saturate Oregon and California, in parts of Washington's Gifford Pinchot National Forest, barred owl nests outnumber spotted owl sites by a third"............."When barred owls invaded the Olympic Peninsula, spotted owls moved to higher, steeper forests with smaller trees and less food—like moving from a 4-star hotel to some dive motel".........."Where spotted owls are finicky eaters, barred owls consume almost anything, including spotted owls"..............."Barred owls, typically 20 percent larger than their rivals, may take over spotted owl nests or slam into their breasts like feathery missiles"............"While barred owls serve some similar ecological functions with spotted owls, barred owls eat a broader range of prey and there is evidence their invasion is leading to adverse trophic cascades—unexpected declines in other members of the ecological communities because of differences in how spotted owls versus barred owls interact with food webs"..............."In short, spotted owl populations survival may depend on managers' using a two-fold approach of removing barred owls in the short term and preserving the forests(to age to older growth) in the long run".........."Biologists project this combination results in a 95 percent probability that spotted owls will persist in these areas for 50 or more years—a best-case scenario"............."However, without either practice, if habitat conditions worsen and barred owls are not removed at all, spotted owls will be extinct from many of the study areas within decades"


Owls against owls in a challenge for survival


March 5, 2019
Ecological Society of America

Scientists are puzzling out how to address the declining numbers of northern spotted owls (NSO) in their Pacific Northwest forest habitat. A new study in the Ecological Society of America's journal Ecological Applications explores the reasons why spotted owls are losing a foothold in their habitat, forecasts future habitat conditions and species interactions, and suggests best management practices


 Northern Spotted Owl

 Barred Owl
While some restoration of the forest is occurring, there are other pressures affecting the forests like the 2002 Biscuit Fire that burned nearly 500,000 acres in southern Oregon and northern California. From the beginning of the implementation of the 1994 plan, managers expected owl populations to continue declining because regrowth and recovery of old forest is a slow process that occurs over decades.
And yet, even with those projections, mangers and ecologists are surprised NSO populations are decreasing at a greater rate than anticipated. The reason? The northern spotted owls are not alone in their forests.

Historically, Barred Owls were found East of the Mississippi..........now,
expanded into the northern Great Plains and Northwestern States















Barred owls began to invade the northern portion of spotted owl's range about 50 years ago and existed in low numbers in 1994 when the Northwest Forest Plan went into effect. Unfortunately, barred owls are an invasive species and increase quickly in numbers.
"We have known for some time that NSO are reliant on older forest as habitat, that recovering NSO would require recovering this habitat, and that this process of recovery would take many decades," says lead author Charles Yackulic of the U.S. Geological Survey. "Twenty-five years ago, however, we did not anticipate the increases in barred owl abundances would lead to a second major threat to NSO recovery."
The invading barred owl competes with the spotted owl for prime nesting spots and hunting areas. The barred owl is winning the fight and may push the spotted owl to localized extinction in the region in the next few decades without managers intervening. The barred owl is changing the entire ecosystem, so other animals in the forest are losing along with the spotted owl.













"NSO are only found in the Pacific Northwest and play a unique role in the food webs of intact forest in this region," explains Yackulic. "While barred owls serve some similar ecological functions, they eat a broader range of prey and there is evidence their invasion is leading to trophic cascades—unexpected declines in other members of the ecological communities because of differences in how NSO versus barred owls interact with food webs."
In the paper, the researchers analyze the relative importance of habitat conditions and barred owl competition in past and future NSO territorial population dynamics in eleven study areas. They also forecast the future interactions between the two owl species under current management conditions and under scenarios with various levels of barred owl removal or changes in habitat.

Barred Owls are larger(left) than Northern Spotted Owls(right)












They find that recent wide-range declines in NSO occupancy are driven primarily by competition with increasing barred owl populations and removal of barred owls is an effective management option to prevent declines in the near future.
But barred owl removal is not enough on its own, either. While barred owl removal could stabilize NSO populations in the short-term,  regeneration can take 50 or more years. Maintaining or improving habitat conditions is an important factor in promoting spotted owl survival over longer periods and allows managers to be less reliant on barred owl removals in the future.
In short, spotted owl populations survival may depend on managers' using a two-fold approach of removing barred owls in the short term and preserving the forests in the long run. The researchers project this combination results in a 95 percent probability that spotted owls will persist in these areas for 50 or more years—a best-case scenario. However, without either practice, if habitat conditions worsen and barred owls are not removed at all, spotted owls will be extinct from many of the study areas within decades.
In the future, the researchers hope to understand how to effectively use barred owl removal methods, and where to prioritize them. They also want to identify if any  conditions can support both owl species. Who knows—there may be situations under which NSO can coexist with barred owls, and the two can manage to get along.
More information: Ecological Applications (2019). DOI: 10.1002/eap.1861 , https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/eap.1861

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