Speaker
Hannah Horowitz
Speaker's Institution
Colorado State University
Date
2025-05-07
Time
9:30am
Location
Yates 208
Mixer Time
Mixer Time
Calendar (ICS) Event
Additional Information

We are pleased to invite you to join us for the MS Defense Seminar of Hannah Horowitz, titled, “Where You Live Matters: Extreme Weather Conditions Amplify Territory Quality Effects on Island Bird Reproduction”

Date: Wednesday, May 7, 2025
Time: 9:30 – 10:30 AM MST
Location: Yates 208, Colorado State University
Zoom link: Join via Zoom

  • Meeting ID: 955 8166 1774
  • Passcode: jay

Hannah’s research explores how variation in territory quality and extreme weather conditions influence the reproductive success of the Island Scrub-jay (Aphelocoma insularis), a species endemic to Santa Cruz Island, California. Using a 16-year dataset, her work demonstrates that extreme drought and heat have the greatest negative impact on birds occupying lower-quality habitats, whereas cooler, wetter years can enhance reproductive success across the population.

This seminar will be of interest to anyone curious about avian ecology, conservation, or the intersection of climate change and species persistence.

Hannah is a Master’s candidate in the Graduate Degree Program in Ecology at Colorado State University, advised by Dr. Jennifer Neuwald and Dr. Cameron Ghalambor.

We hope you’ll attend and support her as she presents this important work.

Abstract

“Aspects of territory quality and environmental variation (e.g. rainfall, temperature) are key predictors of reproductive success in birds. However, the interaction between variation in territory quality and extreme weather events on reproduction has seldom been explored. The Island Scrub-jay (Aphelocoma insularis), a species endemic to Santa Cruz Island, California, is a highly territorial species where breeding pairs maintain year-round territories that vary in vegetation composition and structure. Using a 16-year dataset, we examined how physical metrics of territory quality and extreme weather conditions affect reproductive output. We found that high-quality territories are characterized by more chaparral/woodland habitat, while low-quality territories have a higher proportion of scrub habitat. In addition, during drought and abnormally hot years, pairs in lower-quality territories experienced significantly reduced reproductive output, often failing to fledge any young at all. Conversely, years of high rainfall and cooler temperatures had a uniformly positive effect, boosting reproductive output for all breeding individuals regardless of territory quality, likely due to increased resource availability. Our findings highlight the importance of how variance in territory quality interacts with drought and high temperatures to disproportionately reduce reproductive output within poor quality territories, but also how wet, cool years can buffer populations by facilitating reproductive success across all territories. As droughts and extreme heat are projected to become more frequent, severe, and prolonged under future climate change scenarios, the reproductive variance among breeding pairs risks reducing the effective population size of this already vulnerable, range-restricted species. This study emphasizes the importance of quantifying variation in territory quality and protecting structurally diverse, high quality habitat types as they may play an outsized role in long-term persistence of territorial species amidst increasing climatic stress.”

Promotional flyer for a Master's Thesis Defense Seminar with Hannah Horowitz with the Graduate Degree Program in Ecology and the Department of Biology at Colorado State University. Advised by Dr.'s Jennifer Neuwald and Cameron Ghalambor. Sponsored by the Smithsonian.

Photo of Hannah Horowitz with a bird of prey on her outstretched hand
Photo of Biology Master's student, Chris DeRouxPhoto of Sophie Maksymkiw smiling and out in the field with a swallowtail butterfly resting on her hand.