J.-F. Therrien, L. J. Goodrich, D. R. Barber, and K. L. Bildstein. 2012. A long-term database on raptor migration at Hawk Mountain Sanctuary, northeastern United States. Ecology 93:1979. http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/12-0353.1


Data Paper

Ecological Archives E093-174-D1.

Copyright


Authors
Data Files
Abstract
Metadata


Author(s)

J. F. Therrien
Acopian Center for Conservation Learning
Hawk Mountain Sanctuary
410 Summer Valley Road, Orwigsburg, Pennsylvania 17961 USA
E-mail: [email protected]

L. J. Goodrich
Acopian Center for Conservation Learning
Hawk Mountain Sanctuary
410 Summer Valley Road, Orwigsburg, Pennsylvania 17961 USA

D. R. Barber
Acopian Center for Conservation Learning
Hawk Mountain Sanctuary
410 Summer Valley Road, Orwigsburg, Pennsylvania 17961 USA

K. L. Bildstein
Acopian Center for Conservation Learning
Hawk Mountain Sanctuary
410 Summer Valley Road, Orwigsburg, Pennsylvania 17961 USA


Data Files

HMS_Migration_Data.txt -- Comma-delimited ASCII text file of the complete migration records for the period 1934–2010. The file consists of 42000 entries with each row comprising 44 cells. No compression was used.


Abstract

In most northern temperate regions diurnal birds of prey, or raptors, migrate seasonally between their breeding and wintering grounds. Although their populations can be logistically difficult to survey and monitor because they are largely secretive and wide-ranging, most raptors are obligate or facultative soaring migrants that congregate along major thermal and orographic updraft corridors during their seasonal movements. Hawk Mountain Sanctuary (41° N, 75° W), which straddles the Kittatinny Ridge, the southernmost ridge in the Appalachian Mountains in eastern Pennsylvania, witnesses large numbers of migrating raptors during autumn migration. The Sanctuary’s long-term migration-count database is the oldest detailed archive on the timing and magnitude of migratory raptors in the world. Records comprise daily (1934–1965) or hourly (1966–present) counts of 18 North American species of raptors migrating past the Sanctuary, as well as detailed weather data recorded from the lookout during autumn migration (15 August to 15 December). The long-term data set has been valuable in understanding raptor migration and population trends. Because top predators such as raptors are sensitive bio-indicators of ecosystem changes, variations in the numbers of individual species also may reflect changes in the health of the environment. Thus, monitoring population trends of raptors can provide crucial information on environmental changes and threats facing wildlife species. Indeed, the Sanctuary’s database has been key in identifying the now well-known example of organochlorine contamination of top predators and has helped the conservation, management, and reintroduction of many species such as Osprey (Pandion haliaetus), Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus), and Peregrine Falcon (Falco peregrinus). This database is of prime significance to conservation ecology and long-term fluctuations in numbers of migratory birds.

Key words: bird counts; bird migration; Hawk Mountain Sanctuary; long-term studies; Pennsylvania (USA); population census; raptor.


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