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Building a better baseline to estimate 160 years of avian population change and create historically informed conservation targets
Authors:Tyler A. Hallman  W. Douglas Robinson  Jenna R. Curtis  Edward R. Alverson
Affiliation:1. Monitoring Department, Swiss Ornithological Institute, Seerose 1, Sempach, CH-6204 Switzerland;2. Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Oregon State University, 104 Nash Hall, Corvallis, OR, 97331 U.S.A.;3. Cornell Lab of Ornithology, 159 Sapsucker Woods Rd. Ithaca, New York, NY, 14850 U.S.A.;4. Lane County Parks, 3050 N. Delta Hwy, Eugene, OR, 97408 U.S.A.
Abstract:Globally, anthropogenic land-cover change has been dramatic over the last few centuries and is frequently invoked as a major cause of wildlife population declines. Baseline data currently used to assess population trends, however, began well after major changes to the landscape. In the United States and Canada, breeding bird population trends are assessed by the North American Breeding Bird Survey, which began in the 1960s. Estimates of distribution and abundance prior to major habitat alteration would add historical perspective to contemporary trends and allow for historically based conservation targets. We used a hindcasting framework to estimate change in distribution and abundance of 7 bird species in the Willamette Valley, Oregon (United States). After reconciling classification schemes of current and 1850s reconstructed land cover, we used multiscale species distribution models and hierarchical distance sampling models to predict spatially explicit densities in the modern and historical landscapes. We estimated that since the 1850s, White-breasted Nuthatch (Sitta carolinensis) and Western Meadowlark (Sturnella neglecta) populations, 2 species sensitive to fragmentation of oak woodlands and grasslands, declined by 93% and 97%, respectively. Five other species we estimated nearly stable or increasing populations, despite steep regional declines since the 1960s. Based on these estimates, we developed historically based conservation targets for amount of habitat, population, and density for each species. Hindcasted reconstructions provide historical perspective for assessing contemporary trends and allow for historically based conservation targets that can inform current management.
Keywords:backcasting  Breeding Bird Survey  hindcasting  population change  vegetation reconstruction  análisis retrospectivo  cambio poblacional  Censo de Aves Reproductoras  reconstrucción de la vegetación  后报  预报  种群变化  《繁殖鸟类调查》  植被重建
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