Centre for Integrative Ecology, School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Deakin University, 75 Pigdons Road, Waurn Ponds, Victoria 3216, Australia.
Conserv Biol. 2018 Feb;32(1):216-228. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13007. Epub 2017 Oct 5.
Understanding and conserving mobile species presents complex challenges, especially for animals in stochastic or changing environments. Nomadic waterbirds must locate temporary water in arid biomes where rainfall is highly unpredictable in space and time. To achieve this they need to travel over vast spatial scales and time arrival to exploit pulses in food resources. How they achieve this is an enduring mystery. We investigated these challenges in the colonial-nesting Banded Stilt (Cladorhynchus leucocephalus), a nomadic shorebird of conservation concern. Hitherto, Banded Stilts were hypothesized to have only 1-2 chances to breed during their long lifetime, when flooding rain fills desert salt lakes, triggering mass-hatching of brine shrimp. Over 6 years, we satellite tagged 57 individuals, conducted 21 aerial surveys to detect nesting colonies on 14 Australian desert salt lakes, and analyzed 3 decades of Landsat and MODIS satellite imagery to quantify salt-lake flood frequency and extent. Within days of distant inland rainfall, Banded Stilts flew 1,000-2,000 km to reach flooded salt lakes. On arrival, females laid over half their body weight in eggs. We detected nesting episodes across the species' range at 7 times the frequency reported during the previous 80 years. Nesting colonies of thousands formed following minor floods, yet most were subsequently abandoned when the water rapidly evaporated prior to egg hatching. Satellite imagery revealed twice as many flood events sufficient for breeding-colony initiation as recorded colonies, suggesting that nesting at remote sites has been underdetected. Individuals took risk on uncertain breeding opportunities by responding to frequent minor flood events between infrequent extensive flooding, exemplifying the extreme adaptability and trade-offs of species exploiting unstable environments. The conservation challenges of nest predation by overabundant native gulls and anthropogenic modifications to salt lakes filling frequencies require investigation, as do the physiological and navigational mechanisms that enable such extreme strategies.
理解和保护移动物种带来了复杂的挑战,尤其是对处于随机或变化环境中的动物来说。游牧水鸟必须在干旱生物群落中找到临时水源,而这些地方的降雨量在空间和时间上都极不可预测。为了实现这一目标,它们需要在广阔的空间尺度和时间范围内迁徙,以利用食物资源的脉冲。它们如何实现这一目标一直是个谜。我们在具有保护意义的群居筑巢的斑长脚鹬(Cladorhynchus leucocephalus)中研究了这些挑战。迄今为止,人们假设斑长脚鹬在其漫长的一生中只有 1-2 次繁殖机会,即在洪水淹没沙漠盐湖、引发卤虫大量孵化时。在 6 年的时间里,我们为 57 只个体安装了卫星标签,在 14 个澳大利亚沙漠盐湖上进行了 21 次空中调查以检测筑巢群体,分析了 3 个十年的 Landsat 和 MODIS 卫星图像以量化盐湖洪水的频率和范围。在远离内陆降雨后的几天内,斑长脚鹬就飞行了 1000-2000 公里到达洪水泛滥的盐湖。到达后,雌鸟产下了超过其体重一半的卵。我们在该物种的整个分布范围内发现了筑巢事件,其频率是过去 80 年报告的 7 倍。尽管只是轻微的洪水就形成了成千上万的筑巢群体,但由于水在卵孵化前迅速蒸发,大多数群体随后被放弃。卫星图像显示,有两倍于记录筑巢群体的洪水事件足以引发繁殖群体,这表明在偏远地区的筑巢可能被低估了。个体通过对频繁的小规模洪水事件做出反应,而不是等待不常发生的大规模洪水,从而在不确定的繁殖机会中承担风险,这体现了物种在不稳定环境下的极端适应性和权衡取舍。筑巢受到过度繁殖的本地海鸥的捕食以及盐湖填湖频率的人为改变等保护方面的挑战需要进一步调查,同时也需要研究使这种极端策略成为可能的生理和导航机制。