12 Jun 2018
Predicting the effect of environmental change on wading birds: insights from individual-based models

BRANTA — Katharine M. Bowgen


Predicting the effect of environmental change on wading birds: insights from individual-based models

Institution: Bournemouth University, UK

Supervisors: Richard A. Stillman, Roger J.H. Herbert, John Baugh

Details: PhD, 2017

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Subject Keywords: environmental change, individual-based modelling, habitat loss,
Species Keywords: Black-tailed Godwit, Bar-tailed Godwit, Eurasian Curlew, Dunlin, Grey Pplover, Red Knot, Eurasian Oystercatcher, Common Ringed Plover, Common Redshank, Sanderling, Ruddy Turnstone

Abstract

With the pressures that today’s ecosystems are being placed under, from both environmental change and anthropogenic developments, the speed at which management decisions need to be made has increased. Coastal development means that estuaries are particularly affected and their characteristic species, like wading birds (Charadrii), are now experiencing worldwide declines. In such situations there is a need for predictive ecology to understand in advance how species might react to future changes.

This thesis looks into how we can use individual-based models (IBM) to make accurate predictions of how wading birds are affected by environmental change. Starting with previously validated models I show the importance of measuring size of invertebrates though an IBM investigation into regime shifts and wading birds responses. The models show that by altering their diet preferences, birds adapt to regime shifts in their prey but that this maintenance of population size masks the true changes in the system and limits the use of waders as direct bio-indicators of ecosystem health. Using the current literature, an analysis on empirical responses of wader populations to environmental change revealed the lack of comparability between studies and the scarcity of studies on small scale events.

Data from literature and fieldwork was used to develop a comparable suite of individual-based models for five UK estuaries with up to eleven wading bird species. These models were validated using current BTO Wetland Bird Surveys data to increase confidence in final results. Using these new models, investigations of population thresholds and environmental change were carried out. Increases to current populations revealed that several estuaries are no longer able to support the number of birds around the time of Special Protection Area designation. This, alongside higher populations currently seen since the years of designation, indicates the need for re-assessment of SPA species numbers. When looking at the impacts of two types of environmental change, habitat loss and sea-level rise, certain species declined predictably across sites whilst the individual make up of each estuary had particular impacts on some waders more than others.

The work of this thesis further indicates the great potential of using individual-based models to predict the effects of a wide range of environmental changes. With the new models and a quicker and systematic way of developing IBMs for additional areas, we can aid the conservation and management of estuarine systems for wading birds.

Published Papers

Bowgen, K.M., Stillman, R.A. and Herbert, R.J.H. 2015. Predicting the effect of invertebrate regime shifts on wading birds: insights from Poole Harbour, UK. Biological Conservation, 186: 60-68. doi: 10.1016/j.biocon.2015.02.032

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