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Quantifying annual spatial consistency in chick-rearing seabirds to inform important site identification

  • Martin Beal
  • , Paulo Catry
  • , Richard A. Phillips
  • , Steffen Oppel
  • , John P.Y. Arnould
  • , Maria I. Bogdanova
  • , Mark Bolton
  • , Ana P.B. Carneiro
  • , Corey Clatterbuck
  • , Melinda Conners
  • , Francis Daunt
  • , Karine Delord
  • , Kyle Elliott
  • , Aymeric Fromant
  • , José Pedro Granadeiro
  • , Jonathan A. Green
  • , Lewis Halsey
  • , Keith C. Hamer
  • , Motohiro Ito
  • , Ruth Jeavons
  • Jeong Hoon Kim, Nobuo Kokubun, Shiho Koyama, Jude V. Lane, Won Young Lee, Sakiko Matsumoto, Rachael A. Orben, Ellie Owen, Vitor H. Paiva, Allison Patterson, Christopher J. Pollock, Jaime A. Ramos, Paul Sagar, Katsufumi Sato, Scott A. Shaffer, Louise Soanes, Akinori Takahashi, David R. Thompson, Lesley Thorne, Leigh Torres, Yutaka Watanuki, Susan M. Waugh, Henri Weimerskirch, Shannon Whelan, Ken Yoda, José C. Xavier, Maria P. Dias
  • Institute of Applied Psychology
  • BirdLife International
  • British Antarctic Survey
  • Royal Society for the Protection of Birds
  • Deakin University
  • Centre for Ecology and Hydrology
  • San Jose State University
  • State of California
  • University of California at Santa Cruz
  • UMR7372 CNRS-La Rochelle Université
  • McGill University
  • University of Lisbon
  • University of Liverpool
  • Roehampton University
  • University of Leeds
  • Toyo University
  • Korea Polar Research Institute
  • National Institute of Polar Research
  • Nagoya University
  • Oregon State University
  • University of Coimbra
  • National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research
  • The University of Tokyo
  • Hokkaido University
  • Ligue de la Protection des Oiseaux

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Scopus citations

Abstract

Animal tracking has afforded insights into patterns of space use in numerous species and thereby informed area-based conservation planning. A crucial consideration when estimating spatial distributions from tracking data is whether the sample of tracked animals is representative of the wider population. However, it may also be important to track animals in multiple years to capture changes in distribution in response to varying environmental conditions. Using GPS-tracking data from 23 seabird species, we assessed the importance of multi-year sampling for identifying important sites for conservation during the chick-rearing period, when seabirds are most spatially constrained. We found a high degree of spatial overlap among distributions from different years in most species. Multi-year sampling often captured a significantly higher portion of reference distributions (based on all data for a population) than sampling in a single year. However, we estimated that data from a single year would on average miss only 5 % less of the full distribution of a population compared to equal-sized samples collected across three years (min: −0.3 %, max: 17.7 %, n = 23). Our results suggest a key consideration for identifying important sites from tracking data is whether enough individuals were tracked to provide a representative estimate of the population distribution during the sampling period, rather than that tracking necessarily take place in multiple years. By providing an unprecedented multi-species perspective on annual spatial consistency, this work has relevance for the application of tracking data to informing the conservation of seabirds.

Original languageEnglish
Article number109994
JournalBiological Conservation
Volume281
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2023

Keywords

  • Animal tracking
  • Area-based conservation
  • Biotelemetry
  • Key biodiversity areas
  • Marine spatial planning
  • Protected areas
  • Sampling effort
  • Spatial consistency

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