Predicting site quality for shorebird communities: a case study on the Humber estuary, UK
Authored by Richard A Stillman, AD West, JD Goss-Custard, S McGrorty, NJ Frost, DJ Morrisey, AJ Kenny, AL Drewitt
Date Published: 2005
DOI: 10.3354/meps305203
Sponsors:
English Nature
ABP Marine Environmental Research
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The conservation importance of estuaries is often measured by bird
numbers, but monitoring numbers is not necessarily a reliable way of
assessing changes in site quality. We used an individual-based model, comprised of fitness-maximising individuals, to assess the quality of
the Humber estuary, UK, for 9 shorebirds; dunlin Calidris alpina, common
ringed plover Charadrius hiaticula, red knot Calidris canutus, common
redshank Tringa totanus, grey plover Pluvialis squatarola, blacktailed
godwit Limosa limosa, bar-tailed godwit L. lapponica, Eurasian
oystercatcher Haematopus ostralegus and Eurasian curlew Numenius
arquata. We measured site quality as predicted overwinter survival. The
model accurately predicted the observed shorebird distribution (if
non-starving birds were assumed to feed on any prey or patch on which
intake rate equalled or exceeded their requirements), and the diets of
most species. Predicted survival rates were highest in dunlin and common
ringed plovers, the smallest species, and in Eurasian oystercatchers, which consumed larger prey than the other species. Shorebird survival
was most strongly influenced by the biomass densities of annelid worms, and the bivalve molluscs Cerastoderma edule and Macoma balthica. A 2 to
8 \% reduction in intertidal area (the magnitude expected through sea
level rise and industrial developments) decreased predicted survival
rates of all species except the dunlin, common ringed plover, red knot
and Eurasian oystercatcher. This paper shows how an individual-based
model can assess present-day site quality and predict how site quality
may change in the future. The model was developed using existing data
from intertidal invertebrate and bird monitoring schemes plus new
intertidal invertebrate data collected over 2 winters. We believe that
individual-based models are useful tools for assessing estuarine site
quality.
Tags
Mortality
interference
Density
Body-weight
Foraging behavior
Oystercatchers
Behavior-based model
Wadden sea
Shellfishery
Migratory birds