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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Estuarine areas worldwide are under intense
pressure due to human activities such as upstream dam
building. Shorebirds strongly depend on estuarine intertidal
flats during migration and wintering periods and so are
particularly vulnerable to such impacts, whose magnitude
will depend on the availability of alternative feeding habitats.
In this study we analyze if man-made saltpans can
represent an alternative habitat for wintering and migrating
shorebirds in the Guadiana estuary, a wetland that is
already experiencing environmental changes due to the
building of the Alqueva reservoir, the largest in Western
Europe. We compared the use of mudflats and saltpans as
feeding areas by several shorebird species before the construction
of the dam. A dataset with 26 years of counts data
was also analyzed in order to detect any long-term trend in
shorebirds abundance. We concluded that saltpans, in
particular the fully mechanized, can be used as an alternative
habitat by larger species during winter and southward
migration, thus playing a major role in minimizing
the possible effects of sediment loss due to dam building.
In contrast, smaller species were particularly dependent on
mudflats to feed. A significant change in population trends,
from positive to negative, was detected for two species.
Although we still have no evidence that this is directly
linked to dam building, this result and documented changes
that limit primary productivity justifies the implementation
of a long-term monitoring scheme of shorebird populations
in this estuary. We also reinforce the need to manage the
saltpans as key habitats for shorebirds.
Description
Keywords
Alqueva dam Estuaries Foraging ecology Management Shorebirds
Citation
Environmental Management, 53, 163-171
Publisher
Springer