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				 Bryan Reiley, a graduate research assistant at the Illinois 
				Natural History Survey, studied the body condition and number of 
				male warblers returning to two sites in southeast Arkansas 
				during four breeding seasons. He investigated the warblers 
				before the 2008 catastrophic flooding of the Mississippi River 
				and three years after the flood. 
				 
				Swainson’s Warblers (Limnothlypis swainsonii) are rare, 
				occurring in the Caribbean basin during the winter months and 
				primarily in the southeastern United States from April through 
				August. They also reach southern Illinois and the Appalachian 
				Mountains. This species typically lives in canebrakes adjacent 
				to rivers in floodplain forests. 
				 
				From 2005 to 2010, Reiley studied 278 males. He anticipated that 
				their body condition would decrease in the years after the 2008 
				flood because warblers forage for insects under fallen leaves 
				and debris. He also assumed that fewer birds would return to the 
				previously flooded site in subsequent years. 
              
                
				  
              
				He found that the condition of males was actually better in the 
				years after the flood, perhaps because the La Niña climate 
				pattern created favorable conditions at the birds’ wintering 
				grounds. 
				 
				Flooding did affect the number of males returning to the study 
				site, however. Before the flood, 20 to 31 males returned to 
				breed each spring, whereas in 2008, 18 males returned. The 
				following year, Reiley counted only 7 birds, and in a follow-up 
				observation in 2014, only 2 warblers were observed at the site. 
				 
				For birds that attempted to breed in these habitats in the years 
				following the flood, reduced leaf litter and shrub cover might 
				have resulted in reduced habitat quality and decreased nesting 
				success, leading to a significant drop in the number of birds 
				occupying the area in the second and third years post-flood. 
              
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			“Habitats are never static,” Reiley said. “Swainson’s Warblers may 
			reside in upland habitats following a significant flood. I’ve seen 
			them feeding in the trees when they would normally forage on the 
			ground. They can be flexible when their habitat is continually 
			changing.” 
			 
			To keep Swainson’s Warblers in a forest environment after a flood, 
			increased forest management may be necessary, Reiley said. Flooding 
			is not a unique condition, but the increased frequency and duration 
			of flooding that may result from a changing climate can be stressful 
			for birds. 
			 
			“If the habitat changes too much, Swainson’s Warblers will not use 
			it, and they may never return to that area,” Reiley said. 
			 
			The study was funded by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Reiley 
			is a PhD candidate in the Department of Natural Resources & 
			Environmental Sciences, and his advisor is Thomas Benson, a wildlife 
			ecologist in the Prairie Research Institute’s Illinois Natural 
			History Survey. The article can be found at
			
			http://journals.plos. org/plosone/articleid=10.1371/journal. 
			pone.0175179. 
			 
			[Lisa A. Sheppard] 
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