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    Everglades

    National Park Florida

Cape Sable Seaside Sparrow: In Depth

Photograph of Cape Sable Seaside Sparrow perched in sawgrass

Changes in habitat continue to threaten the Cape Sable Seaside Sparrow with extinction. The preferred nesting habitat of this ground-nesting species appears to be a mixed marl prairie community that often includes muhly grass. These short-hydroperiod prairies contain moderately dense, clumped grasses, with open space that leaves room for ground movements by the sparrows. Sparrows tend to avoid tall, dense, sawgrass-dominated communities, spike-rush marshes, extensive areas of cattails, long-hydroperiod wetlands with tall, dense vegetation, and areas of woody vegetation. The sparrows build cup-shaped nests about  six inches off the ground, thereby making their nests vulnerable to even moderately high floodwaters and to predation by snakes and rats. Properly managed water deliveries through the gates of the upstream Water Conservation Area 3 are crucial to nesting success. The fidelity of breeding male sparrows to their territories is high, and many male seaside sparrows will defend the same area for 2 to 3 years. Short-range movements have been observed during the nonbreeding season, but movement ends at the edge of the short-hydroperiod marl prairie habitat, and deep water and wooded habitat are barriers to longer-range movement. Because sparrows do not live for more than about 4 years and do not regularly disperse over large distances, low breeding success for 3 or more years will cause a dramatic decline in sparrow numbers.

Suitable sparrow habitat results from the proper combination of hydroperiod and periodic fires. Fires prevent the invasion of hardwood species and prevent the accumulation of dead plant material, both of which decrease habitat suitability for the sparrows. Although fire is crucial to maintaining the health of the Everglades ecosystem, sparrow habitat becomes unusable immediately after a fire and sparrows avoid breeding in burned habitat for several additional years. In addition, fire kills eggs, nestlings, and recently fledged young, and can cause direct mortality of adults. Research is underway to determine optimum fire frequencies for sparrow habitat and to develop effective fire-management techniques for restoring and maintaining suitable sparrow habitat.
 
 

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

 

Sparrow in the Grass: A Report on the First Ten years of Research on the Cape Sable Seaside Sparrow (Ammodramus maritimus mirabilis)
Stuart L. Pimm, Julie L. Lockwood, Clinton N. Jenkins, John L. Curnutt, M. Phillip Nott, Robert D. Powell, and Oron L. Bass, Jr., 1997

Effects of Fire on the Cape Sable Seaside Sparrow
Julie L. Lockwood, David A. La Puma, Phillip Cassey, Michelle J. Davis, and Katherine H. Fenn, 1999

2004 Cape Sable Seaside Sparrow Report
Stuart L. Pimm, Clinton Jenkins, and Oron L. Bass, Jr., 2000

Quantifying Hydrologic Constraints on the Population of Cape Sable Seaside Sparrow
Quan Dong, Brian S. Cade, Mario Alvarado, Lori Oberhofer, and O.L. Sonny Bass, 2003

 

Did You Know?

Ranger Slogging

Many visitors in Everglades National Park enjoy a day of slogging - wading through the shallow waters in search of wildlife and the secrets of water.