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The Importance of the Water Conservation Areas in the Everglades to the Endangered Wood Stork (Mycteria americana)
Authors:G. Thomas Bancroft  Wayne Hoffman  Richard J. Sawicki  John C. Ogden
Affiliation:Field Research Department National Audubon Society 115 Indian Mound Trail Tavernier, FL 33070, U.S.A.South Florida Research Center Everglades National Park P.O. Box 279 Homestead, FL 33030, U.S.A.
Abstract:During 1985–1989, numbers of the endangered Wood Stork ( Mycteria americana ) in the Water Conservation Areas of the Everglades, Florida, showed an annual peak in February or March of 1233 to 7874 birds. The annual maxima are significantly greater in dry years than in wet years (P < 0.05). Most storks are nonbreeders and are found foraging in open habitats along the eastern and southern parts of Conservation Area 1 and Conservation Area 2A and along the west-central side of Conservation Area 3A. In dry years, large numbers move into the southern half of Conservation Area 3A. We estimated that in spring, the total southeastern United States population of Wood Storks is between 14,000 and 20,000 individuals. The annual maxima of the water conservation areas were at least 8% to 10% of the total southeastern U.S. population in wet years and possibly as much as 55% in dry years. The Water Conservation Areas appear to be critical foraging habitat for wintering storks, especially during drought years when most of the rest of south Florida is dry. Changes in the management of these areas could have a major impact on the status of storks throughout the southeastern United States.
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