Hello, Ecologists.

Here is a summary of the contents of vol. 39 no. 2 (2008) of the quarterly 
journal Western Birds, published by Western Field Ornithologists.

* NEST SPACING IN ELEGANT TERMS: HEXAGONAL PACKING REVISITED.
* By CHARLES T. COLLINS and MICHAEL D. TAYLOR.
* Pp. 62-68.
* At a tern-and-skimmer colony in coastal southern California, Elegant Tern 
nests are placed in a hexagonal array, a configuration that maximizes density; 
a role for predation in promoting a hexagonal nest array of Elegant Terns is 
suspected but unclear.

* REASSESSMENT OF TROPICAL PARULA SUBSPECIES IN BAJA CALIFORNIA SUR.
* By MASHALL J. ILIFF, RICHARD A. ERICKSON, and MARK J. BILLINGS.
* Pp. 69-81.
* A Tropical Parula at Todos Santos, Baja California Sur, 2006-2008, was 
determined to be of the subspecies insularis from the Tres Marias Islands, not 
graysoni from Socorro Island; reanalysis of all previous Tropical Parulas from 
Baja California Sur (n=3), originally reported as graysoni, likewise 
establishes that they are of the subspecies insularis.

* HABITAT FRAGMENTATION AND SCRUB-SPECIALIST BIRDS: SAN DIEGO FRAGMENTS 
REVISITED.
* By AUTUMN R. SARTAIN and ALLISON C. ALBERTS.
* Pp. 82-93.
* In 2006 populations of eight non-migratory bird species were surveyed in 
fragmented coastal scrub that had been previously surveyed in 1985-1987; local 
extirpations and colonizations were explained by the size and isolation of 
habitat fragments, as well as by life history traits of the eight species.

* FIRST DOCUMENTED BREEDING COLONY OF CASPIAN TERNS IN THE COPPER RIVER DELTA, 
ALASKA.
* By TYEE G. LOHSE, TEAL K. LOHSE, TRAE W. LOHSE, and AARON LANG.
* Pp. 94-96.
* A Copper River Delta colony containing 118 nests in 2006 represents the 
largest assemblage of breeding Caspian Terns yet documented in Alaska; the 
discovery of this colony is consistent with the Caspian Tern's recent 
population increase and northward expansion along the Pacific Coast.

* CASPIAN TERNS NESTING IN ALSKA: PROPHECY, SERENDIPITY, AND IMPLICATIONS FOR 
REGIONAL CLIMATE-RELATED CHANGE.
* By ROBERT E. GILL.
* Pp. 97-100.
* The limits of the breeding range in Alaska of the Caspian Tern may be limited 
by habitat availability, which may in turn be limited by the frequency of 
coastal storms; storm frequency may increase as the climate changes, thus 
diminishing future prospects for the Caspian Tern in Alaska.

* BREEDING BEHAVIOR AND DISPERSAL OF RADIO-MARKED CALIFORNIA CLAPPER RAILS.
* By MICHAEL L. CASAZZA, CORY T. OVERTON, JOHN Y. TAKEKAWA, TOBIAS ROHMER, and 
KENNETH NAVARRE.
* Pp. 101-106.
* A radio telemetry study of Clapper Rails (n=9) of the endangered subspecies 
obsoletus resulted in the documentation of long-distance dispersal by a male; 
tracking by radio telemetry also allowed detailed observations of the breeding 
behavior of this rare and secretive taxon.

* BOOK REVIEW.
* Reviewed by RICHARD C. HOYER.
* Pp. 107-108.
* Review of Birds of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska (Nuttall Ornithological Club 
and American Ornithologists' Union, 2007), by Daniel D. Gibson and G. Vernon 
Byrd.

* BOOK REVIEW.
* Reviewed by NATHAN PIEPLOW.
* Pp. 108-109.
* Review of Birding Colorado (Globe Pequot Press, 2007), by Hugh Kingery.

* FEATURED PHOTO: GREAT GRAY OWLS NESTING IN FRESNO COUNTY, CALIFORNIA.
* By DAVID E. QUADY.
* Pp. 110-116.
* Fresno County, California, is the southernmost location in which breeding has 
been confirmed for the Great Gray Owl; the species is rare in California, with 
an estimated population of 300 individuals in the state, most of them believed 
to occur in the central Sierra Nevada, especially Yosemite National Park.

Please note that vols. 1-35 (1970-2004) of Western Birds are permanently 
archived and fully searchable online: elibrary.unm.edu/sora/index.php. The 
service is free to the public, and is made available by Western Field 
Ornithologists (WFO) and the Searchable Ornithological Research Archive (SORA). 
More information about WFO is available online: westernfieldornithologists.org. 
More information about the journal Western Birds is also available online: 
westernfieldornithologists.org/journal.php.

Ted Floyd
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Lafayette, Boulder County, Colorado
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