IMPORTANCE OF LANDSCAPE HETEROGENEITY TO WOOD STORKS IN FLORIDA EVERGLADES
Authored by Donald L DeAngelis, WF Wolff, DM FLEMING
Date Published: 1994
DOI: 10.1007/bf02394637
Sponsors:
United States Department of the Interior
United States National Park Service
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Declines in populations of and reproductive success of wood storks and
other wading birds have occurred in the Florida Everglades over the past
several decades. These declines have been concurrent with major changes
in the Everglades' landscape characteristics. Among the plausible
hypotheses that relate to landscape change are the following: (1)
general loss of habitat; (2) heavy loss of specific habitat, namely, short-hydroperiod wetlands that provide high prey availability early in
the breeding season; and (3) an increase in frequency of major drying
out of the central slough areas, which can affect prey availability late
in the breeding season.
These three hypotheses were compared using an individual-based model of
wood stork (Mycteria americana) reproduction. This model simulated the
behavior and energetics of each individual wood stork in a breeding
colony on 15-min time intervals. Changes in water depth and prey
availability occurred on daily time steps. Simulation results showed a
threshold response in reproductive success to reduction of wetland
heterogeneity. Model comparisons in which (1) only short-hydroperiod
wetlands were removed and (2) wetlands of both long and short
hydroperiods were removed showed that, for the same loss of total area, the specific habitat removal caused a much greater reduction in wood
stork reproduction, indicating hypothesis 2 may be a more likely
explanation than hypothesis 1. Reduction of initial prey availability in
the central slough areas (simulating frequent drying; hypothesis 3)
reduced fledging success by an average of more than 90\% in the model.
Tags
Management
population
patterns
Bay
Water-flow
Wading birds