The goal of our work...
is to gain knowledge that will inform decision makers on steps necessary to recover threatened and endangered species, while providing training to future scientists and policy makers through graduate education. Legally, recovery entails removal of a species protected by the Endangered Species Act. Ecologically, recovery requires that there is a high probability of persistence of a viable population for the foreseeable future. Our focus is on understanding the ecological factors that are causing reductions in the distribution and abundance of a species. Our approach involves integration of methods across the range of a study species so that results are comparable in space (geography) and time (years). The education of graduate students forms the foundation of our program: graduate students lead the design, implementation, analysis, and reporting of our work.
Our program currently focuses on the ecology of the federally endangered golden-cheeked warbler and black-capped vireo. This warbler is confined during breeding to juniper-oak woodlands of Texas, while the breeding range of this vireo is largely confined to Texas and northern Mexico. For both species we are exploring broad-scale (landscape) factors that drive presence or absence of the species; more local (patch) scale factors that influence bird abundance; and micro-scale (foraging and nest site) factors that determine productivity and survival. Within the context of our overall research goals for these species, graduate students conduct specific studies that explore how various ecological factors influence the activity of the species and ultimately limit population sizes. |


Top: Male Golden-cheeked Warbler singing.
Bottom: Black-capped Vireo female sitting on nest.
|