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Dive into the research topics where Christopher J. Whelan is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher J. Whelan.


The Condor | 2005

QUANTIFYING MALE WOOD THRUSH NEST-ATTENDANCE AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO NEST SUCCESS

Kenneth A. Schmidt; Christopher J. Whelan

Abstract Male Wood Thrushes (Hylocichla mustelina) attend their nests by perching near its rim, a behavior common to many species and presumed to be for the purpose of guarding eggs or young in the nest. We classified nests into two groups based on whether or not we observed an attending male during any nest inspection. We found that nests attended by male Wood Thrushes had higher success rates (i.e., lower predation rates) than unattended nests in Illinois where Blue Jays were a dominant nest predator. In contrast, there was no significant difference in nest success between attended and unattended nests in New York where rodents (mice and chipmunks) and raptors, such as the Sharp-shinned Hawk, were important predators on nests and adults, respectively. Despite differences in risk to adults and nests between the two sites, the frequency of observing attendant males did not differ between sites. In contrast to studies in the literature, the frequency of nest-attendance in the New York population was negatively related to year-to-year variation in chipmunk density, an independent measure of the risk of nest predation. Cuantificación de la Presencia del Macho de Hylocichla mustelina en el Nido y su Relación con el Éxito del Nido Resumen. Los machos de Hylocichla mustelina se posan cerca del borde sus nidos aparentemente con el propósito de vigilar sus huevos o sus crías, lo que representa un comportamiento común en muchas especies. Clasificamos los nidos en dos grupos basados en la presencia o ausencia de un macho durante las inspecciones de los nidos. Encontramos que los nidos que presentaron machos de H. mustelina tuvieron mayores tasas de éxito (i.e., menores tasas de depredación) que los nidos sin machos en Illinois, donde Cyanocitta cristata fue el depredador de nidos dominante. En contraste, no hubo una diferencia significativa en el éxito de los nidos entre los que contaron o no con la presencia de machos en Nueva York, donde los roedores (ratones y ardillas listadas) y las rapaces (como Accipiter striatus) fueron importantes depredadores tanto de nidos como de adultos. A pesar de las diferencias en el riesgo al que están sujetos los adultos y los nidos entre los dos sitios, la frecuencia de observación de presencia de machos no difirió entre los sitios. En contraste con los estudios publicados, la frecuencia de la presencia de machos en los nidos en la población de Nueva York se relacionó negativamente con la variación interanual en la densidad de ardillas listadas, lo que representa una medida independiente del riesgo de depredación de los nidos.


The Wilson Journal of Ornithology | 2004

Behavioral interactions between fire ants and vertebrate nest predators at two black-capped vireo nests

Jennifer E. Smith; Steven J. Taylor; Christopher J. Whelan; Michael L. Denight; Mike M. Stake

Abstract We report on behavioral interactions between fire ants (Solenopsis invicta) and vertebrate predators at two Black-capped Vireo (Vireo atricapilla) nests at Fort Hood, Texas. In the presence of fire ants, an eastern woodrat (Neotoma floridana) failed to depredate a clutch of vireo eggs at one nest, while a rat snake (Elaphe obsoleta lindheimeri) depredated nestlings at another nest, despite fire ants swarming the nest. Neither nest was successful. Direct and indirect effects of interactions among nest predators on avian nesting success need further assessment.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Ecology and Demography of Free-Roaming Domestic Dogs in Rural Villages near Serengeti National Park in Tanzania.

Anna Czupryna; Joel S. Brown; Machunde Bigambo; Christopher J. Whelan; Supriya D. Mehta; Rachel M. Santymire; Felix Lankester; Lisa J. Faust

Free-roaming dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) are of public health and conservation concern because of their potential to transmit diseases, such as rabies, to both people and wildlife. Understanding domestic dog population dynamics and how they could potentially be impacted by interventions, such as rabies vaccination, is vital for such disease control efforts. For four years, we measured demographic data on 2,649 free-roaming domestic dogs in four rural villages in Tanzania: two villages with and two without a rabies vaccination campaign. We examined the effects of body condition, sex, age and village on survivorship and reproduction. Furthermore, we compared sources of mortality among villages. We found that adult dogs (>12mos) had higher survival than puppies in all villages. We observed a male-biased sex ratio across all age classes. Overall survival in one non-vaccination village was lower than in the other three villages, all of which had similar survival probabilities. In all villages, dogs in poor body condition had lower survival than dogs in ideal body condition. Sickness and spotted hyena (Crocuta crocuta) predation were the two main causes of dog death. Within vaccination villages, vaccinated dogs had higher survivorship than unvaccinated dogs. Dog population growth, however, was similar in all the villages suggesting village characteristics and ownership practices likely have a greater impact on overall dog population dynamics than vaccination. Free-roaming domestic dogs in rural communities exist in the context of their human owners as well as the surrounding wildlife. Our results did not reveal a clear effect of vaccination programs on domestic dog population dynamics. An investigation of the role of dogs and their care within these communities could provide additional insight for planning and implementing rabies control measures such as mass dog vaccination.


Archive | 2007

The Evolution of Gut Modulation and Diet Specialization as a Consumer-Resource Game

Christopher J. Whelan; Joel S. Brown; Jason D. Moll

Diet provides an important source of niche partitioning that promotes species coexistence and biodiversity. Often, one species selects for a scarcer but more nutritious food (Thomson gazelle) while another opportunistically consumes low-and high-quality foods indiscriminately (African buffalo). In addition to choosing a diet (selective versus opportunistic), organisms have co-adapted digestion physiologies that vary in size and the throughput rate at which food passes through the gut. We combine these elements into a game of resource competition. We consider a vector-valued strategy with elements of gut size and throughput rate. To the forager, food items now have three properties relating to the value of a particular strategy: profitability (energy gained per unit handling time), richness (energy gained per unit bulk), and ease of digestion (energy gain per unit of passage time). When foraging on foods that differ in profitability, richness, and ease of digestion, adjustment or modulation of gut size and throughput rate leads to digestive-system specialization. Modulation of digestive physiology to a particular food type causes different food types to become antagonistic resources. Adjustment of gut volume and processing thus selects for different degrees of diet specialization or opportunism, and thus may promote niche diversification. This in turn sets the stage for disruptive or divergent selection and may promote sympatric speciation.


Bird Study | 2015

Diet preference in the House Sparrow Passer domesticus: hooked on millet?

Christopher J. Whelan; Joel S. Brown; Amy E. Hank

Capsule House Sparrows preferred millet over seeds of prairie forbs and grasses native to the USA. By reducing the abundance and availability of some grains, changing agricultural practices may contribute to the population declines of House Sparrows seen in some parts of their range.


American Midland Naturalist | 2016

Restoration Implications of Land Management Legacy on Aboveground and Seed Bank Composition of North American Grasslands

Jason J. Zylka; Christopher J. Whelan; Brenda Molano-Flores

Abstract A variety of nonprairie landscapes, including pastures, crop fields, and unmanaged seral ground, are being restored to native prairie on a yearly basis. Seldom is the seed bank associated with these nonprairie lands taken into account in the restoration process. We examine the seed bank potential of nonprairie lands and the relationship between aboveground vegetation and seed bank composition at the largest grassland restoration east of the Mississippi River, the Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie (U.S.A.), by surveying six land management histories: remnant prairie, restored prairie, new pasture, active pasture, old field, and crop field. Both aboveground vegetation and seed bank composition varied with land management history. However, species composition of aboveground vegetation differed significantly from the species composition of the seed bank irrespective of land management history. Aboveground vegetation carried a higher proportion of the seed bank flora than vice versa. In contrast to seed banks of other types of grasslands, the seed bank of historical prairie lands in the U.S. Midwest, irrespective of subsequent land-use history, is not a viable source of species for restoration of tallgrass prairie. A deficiency of many species in the seed bank flora, coupled with an abundance of weedy, often nonnative species, limits the potential contribution of the seed bank to restoration of a prairie vegetation community. Nevertheless, seed bank studies can provide a cost effective method to detect problematic species (i.e., weedy and/or invasive species) and therefore provide a window into the restoration potential of nonprairie lands.


Oikos | 2005

Optimal foraging and gut constraints : reconciling two schools of thought

Christopher J. Whelan; Joel S. Brown


Evolutionary Ecology Research | 2000

Linking consumer-resource theory and digestive physiology: Application to diet shifts

Christopher J. Whelan; Joel S. Brown; Kenneth A. Schmidt; Benjamin B. Steele; Mary F. Willson


The Condor | 2015

Urban residents' perceptions of birds in the neighborhood: Biodiversity, cultural ecosystem services, and disservices

J. Amy Belaire; Lynne M. Westphal; Christopher J. Whelan; Emily S. Minor


Oikos | 2010

Nesting in an uncertain world: information and sampling the future

Kenneth A. Schmidt; Christopher J. Whelan

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Joel S. Brown

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Steven J. Taylor

Illinois Natural History Survey

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Michael L. Denight

Engineer Research and Development Center

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Brenda Molano-Flores

Illinois Natural History Survey

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Paul A. Orlando

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Amy E. Hank

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Anna Czupryna

University of Illinois at Chicago

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