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东北海啸的教训:岛屿鸟类保护优先级模型。

Lessons from the Tōhoku tsunami: A model for island avifauna conservation prioritization.

作者信息

Reynolds Michelle H, Berkowitz Paul, Klavitter John L, Courtot Karen N

机构信息

U.S. Geological Survey Pacific Island Ecosystems Research Center Hawai'i National Park HI USA.

Hawai'i Cooperative Studies Unit University of Hawai'i at Hilo Hawai'i National Park HI USA.

出版信息

Ecol Evol. 2017 Jun 22;7(15):5873-5890. doi: 10.1002/ece3.3092. eCollection 2017 Aug.

Abstract

Earthquake-generated tsunamis threaten coastal areas and low-lying islands with sudden flooding. Although human hazards and infrastructure damage have been well documented for tsunamis in recent decades, the effects on wildlife communities rarely have been quantified. We describe a tsunami that hit the world's largest remaining tropical seabird rookery and estimate the effects of sudden flooding on 23 bird species nesting on Pacific islands more than 3,800 km from the epicenter. We used global positioning systems, tide gauge data, and satellite imagery to quantify characteristics of the Tōhoku earthquake-generated tsunami (11 March 2011) and its inundation extent across four Hawaiian Islands. We estimated short-term effects of sudden flooding to bird communities using spatially explicit data from Midway Atoll and Laysan Island, Hawai'i. We describe variation in species vulnerability based on breeding phenology, nesting habitat, and life history traits. The tsunami inundated 21%-100% of each island's area at Midway Atoll and Laysan Island. Procellariformes (albatrosses and petrels) chick and egg losses exceeded 258,500 at Midway Atoll while albatross chick losses at Laysan Island exceeded 21,400. The tsunami struck at night and during the peak of nesting for 14 colonial seabird species. Strongly philopatric Procellariformes were vulnerable to the tsunami. Nonmigratory, endemic, endangered Laysan Teal () were sensitive to ecosystem effects such as habitat changes and carcass-initiated epizootics of avian botulism, and its populations declined approximately 40% on both atolls post-tsunami. Catastrophic flooding of Pacific islands occurs periodically not only from tsunamis, but also from storm surge and rainfall; with sea-level rise, the frequency of sudden flooding events will likely increase. As invasive predators occupy habitat on higher elevation Hawaiian Islands and globally important avian populations are concentrated on low-lying islands, additional conservation strategies may be warranted to increase resilience of island biodiversity encountering tsunamis and rising sea levels.

摘要

地震引发的海啸会使沿海地区和低洼岛屿面临突然被洪水淹没的威胁。尽管近几十年来海啸对人类造成的危害和基础设施破坏已有详尽记录,但对野生动物群落的影响却鲜有量化研究。我们描述了一场袭击世界上现存最大的热带海鸟繁殖地的海啸,并估算了突然的洪水对在距离震中3800多公里的太平洋岛屿上筑巢的23种鸟类的影响。我们利用全球定位系统、潮汐测量数据和卫星图像,来量化2011年3月11日东北地震引发的海啸的特征及其在四个夏威夷岛屿上的淹没范围。我们利用来自夏威夷中途岛和莱桑岛的空间明确数据,估算了突然的洪水对鸟类群落的短期影响。我们根据繁殖物候、筑巢栖息地和生活史特征,描述了物种脆弱性的差异。海啸淹没了中途岛和莱桑岛各岛屿面积的21% - 100%。在中途岛,鹱形目(信天翁和海燕)的雏鸟和鸟蛋损失超过258,500个,而在莱桑岛,信天翁雏鸟损失超过21,400个。海啸发生在夜间,且正值14种群居海鸟的筑巢高峰期。具有强烈恋巢性的鹱形目鸟类很容易受到海啸的影响。不迁徙的特有濒危物种莱桑鸭()对栖息地变化和由尸体引发的禽肉毒杆菌病等生态系统影响很敏感,海啸过后,这两个环礁上的莱桑鸭种群数量均下降了约40%。太平洋岛屿的灾难性洪水不仅周期性地由海啸引发,也由风暴潮和降雨导致;随着海平面上升,突然的洪水事件发生频率可能会增加。由于入侵性捕食者占据了夏威夷较高海拔岛屿的栖息地,并将全球重要的鸟类种群集中在低洼岛屿上,可能需要额外的保护策略来提高岛屿生物多样性应对海啸和海平面上升的恢复力。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/9f0a/5552970/405fc478d9d4/ECE3-7-5873-g001.jpg

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