利用航空图像评估加拿大萨斯喀彻温省黑燕鸥栖息地协会

Pub Date : 2023-06-27 DOI:10.1675/063.045.0304
N. Shephard, M. Reudink, A. McKellar
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引用次数: 2

摘要

摘要整个北美内陆的湿地退化导致许多水鸟失去了繁殖栖息地。黑燕鸥(Chlidonias niger)是一种专为沼泽繁殖的殖民地水鸟,经历了广泛的、长期的数量下降。农业转化、湿地排水和农用化学品径流导致的栖息地丧失和退化已被确定为主要威胁,研究表明,繁殖栖息地的减少可能是导致种群减少的一个因素。生境关联研究已经注意到黑燕鸥与湿地特征之间的关系,包括植被类型等局地尺度因子和湿地密度等景观尺度因子。然而,类似的研究还没有在萨斯喀彻温省进行,萨斯喀彻温省是北美物种分布的核心。我们利用高分辨率遥感图像将萨斯喀彻温省湿地的栖息地、土地利用和地理协变量与繁殖黑燕鸥的发生及其种群数量联系起来。我们发现群落的发生与湿地中出现的水生植被的程度呈正相关。在萨斯喀彻温省的中纬度地区,种群数量和数量最高,对应于南部草原和北部北方森林之间的北方过渡带。研究结果表明,黑燕鸥可能首先在景观尺度上选择栖息地,可能与湿地密度有关,然后根据湿地特征占据特定的繁殖群落。
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Assessing Black Tern (Chlidonias niger) Habitat Associations in Saskatchewan, Canada, Using Aerial Imagery
Abstract. Wetland degradation throughout the interior of North America has resulted in a loss of breeding habitat for many waterbird species. The Black Tern (Chlidonias niger) is an obligate marsh-breeding colonial waterbird that has experienced widespread, long-term population declines. Habitat loss and degradation through agricultural conversion, wetland drainage, and agrochemical runoff have been identified as key threats, and studies have suggested that a decline in breeding habitat may be a contributing factor to population declines. Habitat association studies have noted relationships between Black Terns and wetland characteristics, including both local-scale factors such as vegetation type, and landscape-scale factors such as wetland density. However, similar studies have not been conducted in Saskatchewan, the core of the species range in North America. We used high-resolution remotely-sensed imagery to relate habitat, land use, and geographic covariates at wetlands in Saskatchewan to the occurrence of breeding Black Terns and numbers at their colonies. We found that colony occurrence was positively associated with the extent of emergent aquatic vegetation present at a wetland. There was a strong non-linear effect of latitude, whereby colony occurrence and abundance were highest at mid-latitudes in Saskatchewan, corresponding to the boreal transition zone between the prairies to the south and boreal forest to the north. Our results suggest that Black Terns may be first selecting habitat at the landscape scale, perhaps in relation to wetland density, then occupying specific breeding colonies based on wetland characteristics.
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