Resolving the population status of Ascension Frigatebird Fregata aquila using a `virtual ecologist' model
Authored by Norman Ratcliffe, Tara Pelembe, Richard White
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.1111/j.1474-919x.2007.00778.x
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Microsoft Visual Basic
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The Ascension Frigatebird is an island endemic whose conservation status
was subject to confusion owing to difficulties in counting and
misinterpretation of data. Accurate nest counts for this species are
problematic owing to their extremely prolonged breeding seasons, high
nest failure rates, turnover of individuals at nest-sites, replacement
laying and biennial breeding. We conducted repeated complete censuses of
Ascension Frigatebird eggs at the species' sole colony of Boatswainbird
Island, and collected data on laying phenology and nest survival rates
within sample quadrats, throughout the 2001 and 2002 breeding seasons.
We used these data to develop an individual-based model that predicted
the number of Frigatebird nests present on each day an actual census
occurred assuming an arbitrary 1000 breeding females bred there. We then
divided the number of nests counted in these virtual censuses by 1000 to
quantify bias, and used this figure to correct real census totals. The
model revealed that the population numbered c. 6250 breeding females and
c. 9350 mature females in 2001-2, and that numbers have not changed
significantly since the late 1950s. Productivity, at 0.34 chicks/pair, was high compared to previous studies of Ascension Frigatebirds and most
of those of congeners elsewhere.
Tags
Success
Aldabra atoll
Magnificent frigatebird
Breeding biology
Tropic-birds
Seychelles
Lepturus
Ariel