Individual-based ecology of coastal birds
Authored by Richard A Stillman, John D Goss-Custard
Date Published: 2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-185x.2009.00106.x
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
MORPH
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Conservation objectives for non-breeding coastal birds (shorebirds and
wildfowl) are determined from their population size at coastal sites. To
advise coastal managers, models must predict quantitatively the effects
of environmental change on population size or the demographic rates
(mortality and reproduction) that determine it. As habitat association
models and depletion models are not able to do this, we developed an
approach that has produced such predictions thereby enabling policy
makers to make evidence-based decisions. Our conceptual framework is
individual-based ecology, in which populations are viewed as having
properties (e.g. size) that arise from the traits (e.g. behaviour, physiology) and interactions of their constituent individuals. The link
between individuals and populations is made through individual-based
models (IBMs) that follow the fitness-maximising decisions of
individuals and predict population-level consequences (e.g. mortality
rate) from the fates of these individuals. Our first IBM was for
oystercatchers Haematopus ostralegus and accurately predicted their
density-dependent mortality. Subsequently, IBMs were developed for
several shorebird and wildfowl species at several European sites, and
were shown to predict accurately overwinter mortality, and the foraging
behaviour from which predictions are derived. They have been used to
predict the effect on survival in coastal birds of sea level rise, habitat loss, wind farm development, shellfishing and human disturbance.
This review emphasises the wider applicability of the approach, and
identifies other systems to which it could be applied. We view the IBM
approach as a very useful contribution to the general problem of how to
advance ecology to the point where we can routinely make meaningful
predictions of how populations respond to environmental change.
Tags
Functional-response
Behavior-based model
Shorebird mortality
Deriving population parameters
Environmental
gradients
Spatial depletion model
Mussel
mytilus-edulis
Oystercatchers haematopus-ostralegus
Predicting site quality
Interference competition