Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Location
Corpus Christi, TX
Start Date
9-4-2007 12:00 AM
Description
The northern Great Plains are home to a variety of birds throughout the year, particularly during migration. Migratory species use native and restored grasslands, shelterbelts, and agricultural fields for food and shelter in North Dakota. Blackbirds (Xanthocephalus xanthocephalus) have been documented to cause economically important damage to some crops and thus, are sometimes the target of concerted harassment efforts. Few studies have assembled an inventory of non blackbirds using small grain fields during the fall and spring in North Dakota that may be inadvertently affected by blackbird management. At least 94 nonblackbird species use crop fields in the spring and fall in North Dakota. Sunflower fields appear to be a particularly important stopover habitat for a variety of migratory birds, with 78 species and 29 species using sunflower in the fall and spring, respectively. We encourage a joint blackbird management/wildlife habitat system including Wildlife Conservation Sunflower Plots (lure plots) as part of an integrated pest management plan to reduce blackbird damage to sunflower and provide habitat for nonblackbirds.
Recommended Citation
Hagy, H. M., Linz, G. M., & Bleier, W. J. (2007). Are sunflower fields for the birds? In Nolte, D.L., Arjo, W.M., & Stalman, D. (Eds.), The Twelfth Wildlife Damage Management Conference (61-71). Corpus Christi, TX: National Wildlife Research Center.
Included in
Are Sunflower Fields for the Birds?
Corpus Christi, TX
The northern Great Plains are home to a variety of birds throughout the year, particularly during migration. Migratory species use native and restored grasslands, shelterbelts, and agricultural fields for food and shelter in North Dakota. Blackbirds (Xanthocephalus xanthocephalus) have been documented to cause economically important damage to some crops and thus, are sometimes the target of concerted harassment efforts. Few studies have assembled an inventory of non blackbirds using small grain fields during the fall and spring in North Dakota that may be inadvertently affected by blackbird management. At least 94 nonblackbird species use crop fields in the spring and fall in North Dakota. Sunflower fields appear to be a particularly important stopover habitat for a variety of migratory birds, with 78 species and 29 species using sunflower in the fall and spring, respectively. We encourage a joint blackbird management/wildlife habitat system including Wildlife Conservation Sunflower Plots (lure plots) as part of an integrated pest management plan to reduce blackbird damage to sunflower and provide habitat for nonblackbirds.