Predicting effects of environmental change on a migratory herbivore
Authored by Richard A Stillman, K A Wood, W Gilkerson, E Elkinton, J M Black, D H Ward, M Petrie
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1890/es1400455.1
Sponsors:
Ducks Unlimited
Platforms:
MORPH
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Changes in climate, food abundance and disturbance from humans threaten
the ability of species to successfully use stopover sites and migrate
between non-breeding and breeding areas. To devise successful
conservation strategies for migratory species we need to be able to
predict how such changes will affect both individuals and populations.
Such predictions should ideally be process-based, focusing on the
mechanisms through which changes alter individual physiological state
and behavior. In this study we use a process-based model to evaluate how
Black Brant (Branta bernicla nigricans) foraging on common eelgrass
(Zostera marina) at a stopover site (Humboldt Bay, USA), may be affected
by changes in sea level, food abundance and disturbance. The model is
individual-based, with empirically based parameters, and incorporates
the immigration of birds into the site, tidal changes in availability of
eelgrass, seasonal and depth-related changes in eelgrass biomass, foraging behavior and energetics of the birds, and their mass-dependent
decisions to emigrate. The model is validated by comparing predictions
to observations across a range of system properties including the time
birds spent foraging, probability of birds emigrating, mean stopover
duration, peak bird numbers, rates of mass gain and distribution of
birds within the site: all 11 predictions were within 35\% of the
observed value, and 8 within 20\%. The model predicted that the eelgrass
within the site could potentially support up to five times as many birds
as currently use the site. Future predictions indicated that the rate of
mass gain and mean stopover duration were relatively insensitive to sea
level rise over the next 100 years, primarily because eelgrass habitat
could redistribute shoreward into intertidal mudflats within the site to
compensate for higher sea levels. In contrast, the rate of mass gain and
mean stopover duration were sensitive to changes in total eelgrass
biomass and the percentage of time for which birds were disturbed. We
discuss the consequences of these predictions for Black Brant
conservation. A wide range of migratory species responses are expected
in response to environmental change. Process-based models are potential
tools to predict such responses and understand the mechanisms which
underpin them.
Tags
Climate-change
Sea-level rise
Individual-based ecology
Disturbance
Geese
Branta-bernicla-nigricans
Black brant
Humboldt bay
Energy-expenditure
Habitat
use