4.1 Article

Adjustable leg harness for attaching tags to small and medium-sized birds

Journal

JOURNAL OF FIELD ORNITHOLOGY
Volume 92, Issue 1, Pages 77-87

Publisher

Resilience Alliance
DOI: 10.1111/jofo.12353

Keywords

Amazonia; Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments Project; logger; tag effects; terrestrial insectivores; tracking

Categories

Funding

  1. US National Science Foundation [LTREB 0545491, 1257340]
  2. National Institute of Food and Agriculture, US Department of Agriculture, McIntire Stennis projects [94098, 94327]
  3. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Short-Term Fellowship
  4. Neotropical Bird Club Conservation Fund
  5. Lewis and Clark Fund for Exploration and Field Research from the American Philosophical Society
  6. American Ornithological Society
  7. Animal Behavior Society
  8. Wilson Ornithological Society

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The rapid expansion of biologging devices in ornithology has brought new insights. Proper attachment of devices is crucial for maximizing bird welfare and data quality. Research shows that tags attached with the harness method outlined in the study have minimal impact on birds, offering encouraging results amidst the challenges of tracking birds with various devices.
Rapidly expanding use of biologging devices is increasingly bringing novel insights into ornithology. Consequently, to maximize bird welfare and data quality, this growth calls for ensuring that devices are properly attached. Here, we provide a diagram for constructing a simple, field-adjustable leg-loop harness suitable for many small and medium-sized birds (< 200 g). We make harnesses prior to fieldwork using Teflon ribbon and a single crimp, then custom-fit each harness to birds in the field. This largely removes the need for pre-deployment field trials to determine harness size and ensures best possible fit. To evaluate the effects of harnesses on birds in the field, we marked 10 non-migratory species in central Amazonia and assessed their body mass at recapture with linear mixed models. Of 90 tags deployed, we recovered 43 (48%) an average of 359 days later. No individuals lost their tag. Additionally, when recaptures were compared to original captures, body mass was not lower for either tagged birds or 17 banded-only birds. This suggests that tags attached with our harness had little effect on birds, an encouraging result at a time when increasing options for tracking birds challenge researchers to properly attach various types of devices.

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