Combining tracking with at-sea surveys to improve occurrence and distribution estimates of two threatened seabirds in Peru

IF 1.5 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Bird Conservation International Pub Date : 2022-11-21 DOI:10.1017/S0959270922000442
J. Fischer, S. Bose, Cynthia Romero, M. Charteris, P. Crowe, G. Parker, S. Ray, K. Rexer-Huber, P. Sagar, D. Thompson, Elizabeth A Bell, I. Debski, J. Quiñones
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Abstract

Summary Seabirds are highly threatened, including by fisheries bycatch. Accurate understanding of offshore distribution of seabirds is crucial to address this threat. Tracking technologies revolutionised insights into seabird distributions but tracking data may contain a variety of biases. We tracked two threatened seabirds (Salvin’s Albatross Thalassarche salvini n = 60 and Black Petrel Procellaria parkinsoni n = 46) from their breeding colonies in Aotearoa (New Zealand) to their non-breeding grounds in South America, including Peru, while simultaneously completing seven surveys in Peruvian waters. We then used species distribution models to predict occurrence and distribution using either data source alone, and both data sources combined. Results showed seasonal differences between estimates of occurrence and distribution when using data sources independently. Combining data resulted in more balanced insights into occurrence and distributions, and reduced uncertainty. Most notably, both species were predicted to occur in Peruvian waters during all four annual quarters: the northern Humboldt upwelling system for Salvin’s Albatross and northern continental shelf waters for Black Petrels. Our results highlighted that relying on a single data source may introduce biases into distribution estimates. Our tracking data might have contained ontological and/or colony-related biases (e.g. only breeding adults from one colony were tracked), while our survey data might have contained spatiotemporal biases (e.g. surveys were limited to waters <200 nm from the coast). We recommend combining data sources wherever possible to refine predictions of species distributions, which ultimately will improve fisheries bycatch management through better spatiotemporal understanding of risks.
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将跟踪与海上调查相结合,以改善秘鲁两种受威胁海鸟的发生和分布估计
海鸟受到包括渔获物在内的高度威胁。准确了解海鸟的近海分布对应对这一威胁至关重要。追踪技术彻底改变了人们对海鸟分布的认识,但追踪数据可能包含各种偏差。我们跟踪了两种濒临灭绝的海鸟(salin 's Albatross Thalassarche salvini n = 60)和黑海燕(Black petraria parkinsoni n = 46),从它们在新西兰奥特罗阿(Aotearoa)的繁殖地到南美洲(包括秘鲁)的非繁殖地,同时在秘鲁水域完成了7项调查。然后,我们使用物种分布模型来预测发生和分布,其中一个数据源单独使用,两个数据源结合使用。结果显示,当独立使用数据源时,估计的发生和分布之间存在季节性差异。结合数据可以更平衡地了解发生和分布情况,并减少不确定性。最值得注意的是,这两种物种都被预测在秘鲁水域全年四个季度都有出现:洪堡北部上升流系统中有信天翁,北部大陆架水域中有黑海燕。我们的结果强调,依赖单一数据源可能会在分布估计中引入偏差。我们的跟踪数据可能包含本体学和/或群体相关的偏差(例如,只跟踪了一个群体的繁殖成虫),而我们的调查数据可能包含时空偏差(例如,调查仅限于距离海岸<200海里的水域)。我们建议尽可能结合数据来源,以完善物种分布的预测,最终通过更好地了解风险的时空,改善渔业副渔获物管理。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
6.20%
发文量
50
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Bird Conservation International is a quarterly peer-reviewed journal that seeks to promote worldwide research and action for the conservation of birds and the habitats upon which they depend. The official journal of BirdLife International, it provides stimulating, international and up-to-date coverage of a broad range of conservation topics, using birds to illuminate wider issues of biodiversity, conservation and sustainable resource use. It publishes original papers and reviews, including targeted articles and recommendations by leading experts.
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