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沿海湿地鸟类群落衰退的预测因素。

Predictors of specialist avifaunal decline in coastal marshes.

作者信息

Correll Maureen D, Wiest Whitney A, Hodgman Thomas P, Shriver W Gregory, Elphick Chris S, McGill Brian J, O'Brien Kathleen M, Olsen Brian J

机构信息

School of Biology and Ecology and Climate Change Institute, University of Maine, Orono, ME, 04469, U.S.A.

Department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology, University of Delaware, Newark, DE, 19716, U.S.A.

出版信息

Conserv Biol. 2017 Feb;31(1):172-182. doi: 10.1111/cobi.12797. Epub 2016 Aug 19.

Abstract

Coastal marshes are one of the world's most productive ecosystems. Consequently, they have been heavily used by humans for centuries, resulting in ecosystem loss. Direct human modifications such as road crossings and ditches and climatic stressors such as sea-level rise and extreme storm events have the potential to further degrade the quantity and quality of marsh along coastlines. We used an 18-year marsh-bird database to generate population trends for 5 avian species (Rallus crepitans, Tringa semipalmata semipalmata, Ammodramus nelsonii subvirgatus, Ammodramus caudacutus, and Ammodramus maritimus) that breed almost exclusively in tidal marshes, and are potentially vulnerable to marsh degradation and loss as a result of anthropogenic change. We generated community and species trends across 3 spatial scales and explored possible drivers of the changes we observed, including marsh ditching, tidal restriction through road crossings, local rates of sea-level rise, and potential for extreme flooding events. The specialist community showed negative trends in tidally restricted marshes (-2.4% annually from 1998 to 2012) but was stable in unrestricted marshes across the same period. At the species level, we found negative population trends in 3 of the 5 specialist species, ranging from -4.2% to 9.0% annually. We suggest that tidal restriction may accelerate degradation of tidal marsh resilience to sea-level rise by limiting sediment supply necessary for marsh accretion, resulting in specialist habitat loss in tidally restricted marshes. Based on our findings, we predict a collapse of the global population of Saltmarsh Sparrows (A. caudacutus) within the next 50 years and suggest that immediate conservation action is needed to prevent extinction of this species. We also suggest mitigation actions to restore sediment supply to coastal marshes to help sustain this ecosystem into the future.

摘要

沿海湿地是世界上生产力最高的生态系统之一。因此,几个世纪以来它们一直被人类大量利用,导致生态系统丧失。诸如道路交叉和沟渠等直接的人类改造以及海平面上升和极端风暴事件等气候压力因素有可能进一步降低沿海湿地的数量和质量。我们利用一个长达18年的湿地鸟类数据库,得出了5种几乎只在潮汐湿地繁殖的鸟类(黑田鸡、半蹼鹬、尼尔森沙鹀、尖尾沙鹀和海滨沙鹀)的种群趋势,这些鸟类可能因人为变化而容易受到湿地退化和丧失的影响。我们在3个空间尺度上得出了群落和物种趋势,并探讨了我们观察到的变化的可能驱动因素,包括湿地沟渠化、道路交叉导致的潮汐限制、当地海平面上升速度以及极端洪水事件的可能性。专家群落显示,在潮汐受限的湿地中呈负趋势(1998年至2012年每年下降2.4%),但在同一时期的非受限湿地中保持稳定。在物种层面,我们发现5种专家物种中有3种呈负种群趋势,每年下降幅度从4.2%到9.0%不等。我们认为,潮汐限制可能会通过限制湿地淤积所需的沉积物供应,加速潮汐湿地对海平面上升的恢复力退化,导致潮汐受限湿地中的专家栖息地丧失。根据我们的研究结果,我们预测盐沼雀(尖尾沙鹀)的全球种群将在未来50年内崩溃,并建议立即采取保护行动以防止该物种灭绝。我们还建议采取缓解行动,恢复沿海湿地的沉积物供应,以帮助维持这一生态系统直至未来。

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