Please wait...
About This Project
Bachman's sparrow is a beautiful songster once common to the American southeast. Males vary in how aggressively they defend their territory. Do mad dads produce more, healthier offspring, or is aggression costly? We will measure territory quality, aggressiveness, and hormones of territorial males and link these factors to the success of offspring. We aim to conserve Bachman's sparrow and better understand reproductive success in songbirds.

Browse Other Projects on Experiment
Related Projects
Can biome logs transform biomass from a problem to soil-ution?
As catastrophic megafires and flooding intensify across the western United States, fungi and other microbes...
Tiny worlds in desert moss: Microbes and microfauna in biological soil crusts
Desert mosses live closely with lichens and other microorganisms, together performing vital ecosystem services...
What biodiversity is hiding in Northern California’s un-sampled forests?
Large regions of Northern California are as listed as "Un-sampled" on the CA Biodiversity Database. Lets...



