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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
1. The identification of geographic areas where the densities of animals are highest
across their annual cycles is a crucial step in conservation planning. In marine
environments, however, it can be particularly difficult to map the distribution of
species, and the methods used are usually biased towards adults, neglecting the
distribution of other life-history stages even though they can represent a substantial
proportion of the total population.
2. Here we develop a methodological framework for estimating populationlevel
density distributions of seabirds, integrating tracking data across the main life-history stages (adult breeders and non-breeders, juveniles and immatures).
We incorporate demographic information (adult and juvenile/immature survival,
breeding frequency and success, age at first breeding) and phenological
data (average timing of breeding and migration) to weight distribution maps
according to the proportion of the population represented by each life-history
stage.
3. We demonstrate the utility of this framework by applying it to 22 species of
albatrosses
and petrels that are of conservation concern due to interactions with
fisheries. Because juveniles, immatures and non-breeding adults account for
47%–81% of all individuals of the populations analysed, ignoring the distributions
of birds in these stages leads to biased estimates of overlap with threats, and may
misdirect management and conservation efforts. Population-level distribution
maps using only adult distributions underestimated exposure to longline fishing
effort by 18%–42%, compared with overlap scores based on data from all lifehistory
stages.
4. Synthesis and applications. Our framework synthesizes and improves on previous
approaches to estimate seabird densities at sea, is applicable for data-poor situations,
and provides a standard and repeatable method that can be easily updated
as new tracking and demographic data become available. We provide scripts in
the R language and a Shiny app to facilitate future applications of our approach.
We recommend that where sufficient tracking data are available, this framework
be used to assess overlap of seabirds with at-sea threats such as overharvesting,
fisheries bycatch, shipping, offshore industry and pollutants. Based on such an
analysis, conservation interventions could be directed towards areas where they
have the greatest impact on populations.
Description
Keywords
Albatrosses At-sea threats Conservation Distributions Longline fisheries Megafauna Petrels Seabird density
Citation
Journal Ecological Society Doi:10.1111/1365-2664.13568
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Inc.