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Population estimates of shorebirds on the Atlantic Coast of southern South America generated from large-scale, simultaneous, volunteer-led surveys ; Estimaciones de población de aves playeras en la Costa Atlántica del sur de Sudamérica mediante censos simultáneos a gran escala, realizados por voluntarios

Title: Population estimates of shorebirds on the Atlantic Coast of southern South America generated from large-scale, simultaneous, volunteer-led surveys ; Estimaciones de población de aves playeras en la Costa Atlántica del sur de Sudamérica mediante censos simultáneos a gran escala, realizados por voluntarios
Authors: Faria, Fernando Antonio; Aldabe, Joaquín; Almeida, Juliana Bosi de; Bonanno Derndich, Juan José; Bugoni, Leandro; Clay, Robert P.; Garcia-Walther, Julian; González, Agustina; Lesterhuis, Arne; Nunes, Guilherme Tavares
Publication Year: 2025
Collection: Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS): Lume
Subject Terms: Aves marinhas; Distribuição geográfica : Animais; Ornitologia; Sensoriamento remoto; Ecologia de populações; Biogeografia marinha; Charadriidae; Scolopacidae; Abundance; Citizen science; Remote sensing; Waders
Description: Population abundance and trend estimates are crucial to science, management, and conservation. Shorebirds, which are abundant in many coastal habitats and play important roles in coastal ecosystems, are facing some of the most dramatic population declines of any group of birds globally. However, accurate and up-to-date population estimates are lacking for most shorebird species. We thus conducted large-scale, simultaneous, and community scientist-led surveys of the Atlantic Coast of southern South America, stretching from central Brazil to Tierra del Fuego, to gather counts of shorebirds stratified by habitat that we combined with remote sensing analyses and two-step hurdle models that accounted for presence and abundance. Our objectives were to estimate shorebird densities by habitat, identify high-concentration areas, understand the environmental factors affecting their distributions, and provide population estimates for both Nearctic and Neotropical species. We counted a total of 37,207 shorebirds of 17 species and, from those counts, estimated that nearly 1.1 million shorebirds use the region’s coastline. We found that the northern portion of the region was important for sandy beach specialists, while southern portions supported higher abundances of species that rely on intertidal mudflat and rocky habitats. We also found that shorebirds occurred in the highest densities in wetland habitats and that fewer shorebirds occupied areas that were further away from estuaries. Although not directly comparable, our results suggest the population sizes of the Nearctic species whose nonbreeding ranges are predominantly in southern South America may have declined substantially since previous estimates. At the same time, our study represents the first empirically derived population estimates for Neotropical breeding shorebird species and indicates that they are far more abundant than previously thought. ; Las estimaciones deabundancia y detendencias poblacionales son cruciales para laciencia, elmanejo y la conservaciónde ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
Relation: Journal of Field Ornithology. Dedham. Vol. 96, no. 1 (Feb. 2025), art. 2, 12 p.; https://hdl.handle.net/10183/288171; 001242621
Availability: https://hdl.handle.net/10183/288171
Rights: Open Access
Accession Number: edsbas.89079EBC
Database: BASE