Publications by authors named "Lynne E Burns"

Agriculture is one the main drivers of bird decline in both Europe and North America. While it is clear that agricultural practices and changes in the rural landscape directly and indirectly affect bird communities, we still do not know the extent to which these impacts might change across broad spatial and temporal scales. To address this question, we combined information on agricultural activities with occurrence and abundance of 358 bird species across five time periods spanning 20 years in Canada.

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Animals are expected to adjust their behavioral patterns to improve fitness outcomes, such as fecundity or offspring survival. For long-lived hibernators, decisions made in each annual cycle may reflect considerations not just for concurrent survival and reproduction but also the pressure to maximize overwinter survival and future reproductive success. We examined how these elements manifest themselves in the body mass variation patterns of North American northern latitude temperate bats, whose size and roosting habits present considerable monitoring challenges.

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Article Synopsis
  • Temperate bats migrate from summering sites to swarming sites during late summer and early autumn, likely for mating purposes, but the specifics of this migration are not fully understood.
  • The study focused on two bat species - the little brown bat and the northern long-eared bat - to investigate migratory patterns between summering and swarming locations using genetic markers.
  • Results showed moderate genetic differentiation among summering and swarming sites, with swarming sites having higher haplotype diversity, indicating a mix of individuals from different summering areas and not just nearby colonies.
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Characterizing movement dynamics and spatial aspects of gene flow within a species permits inference on population structuring. As patterns of structuring are products of historical and current demographics and gene flow, assessment of structure through time can yield an understanding of evolutionary dynamics acting on populations that are necessary to inform management. Recent dramatic population declines in hibernating bats in eastern North America from white-nose syndrome have prompted the need for information on movement dynamics for multiple bat species.

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