Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, Box 90328, 9 Circuit Drive, Durham, North Carolina, 27708, USA.
Point Blue Conservation Science, 3820 Cypress Dr #11, Petaluma, CA, 94954, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2018 Sep;28(6):1534-1545. doi: 10.1002/eap.1732. Epub 2018 Jul 19.
Over 50% of Western Hemisphere shorebird species are in decline due to ongoing habitat loss and degradation. In some regions of high wetland loss, shorebirds are heavily reliant on a core network of remaining human-managed wetlands during migration journeys in the spring and fall. While most refuges have been designed and managed to match the habitat needs of waterfowl, shorebirds typically require much shallower water (<10 cm deep). Traditional static habitat modeling approaches at relatively coarse spatial and temporal resolution are insufficient to capture dynamic changes within this narrow water depth range. Our objectives were to (1) develop a method to quantify shallow water habitat distributions in inland non-tidal wetlands, and (2) to assess how water management practices affect the amount of shorebird habitat in Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge Complex. We produced water depth distributions and modeled optimal habitat (<10 cm deep) within 23 managed wetlands using high-resolution topography and fixed-point water depth records. We also demonstrated that habitat availability, specifically suitable water depth ranges, can be tracked from satellite imagery and high-resolution topography. We found that wetlands with lower topographic roughness may have a higher potential to provide shorebird habitat and that strategically reducing water levels could increase habitat extent. Over 50% of the wetlands measured provided optimal habitat across <10% of their area at the peak of migration in early April, and most provided a brief duration of shallow water habitat. Reducing water volumes could increase the proportion of optimal habitat by 1-1,678% (mean = 294%) compared to actual volumes measured at peak spring migration in 2016. For wetlands with a high habitat potential, beginning wetland drawdown earlier and extending drawdown time could dramatically improve habitat conditions at the peak of shorebird migration. Our approach can be adapted to track dynamic hydrologic changes at broader spatial scales as additional high-resolution topographic (e.g., lidar, drone imagery photogrammetry) and optical remote sensing data (e.g., planet imagery, drone photography) become available.
由于持续的栖息地丧失和退化,西半球超过 50%的滨鸟物种数量正在下降。在一些湿地损失率较高的地区,滨鸟在春季和秋季的迁徙过程中严重依赖于剩余的、由人类管理的核心湿地网络。虽然大多数保护区的设计和管理都是为了满足水禽的栖息地需求,但滨鸟通常需要较浅的水(<10 厘米深)。在相对粗糙的空间和时间分辨率下,传统的静态栖息地建模方法不足以捕捉这个狭窄水深范围内的动态变化。我们的目标是:(1) 开发一种方法来量化内陆非潮汐湿地的浅层水栖息地分布;(2) 评估水管理实践如何影响萨克拉门托国家野生动物保护区复合体的滨鸟栖息地数量。我们使用高分辨率地形和定点水深记录,为 23 个管理湿地生成了水深分布,并对<10 厘米深的最优栖息地进行了建模。我们还证明,从卫星图像和高分辨率地形可以跟踪栖息地的可用性,特别是合适的水深范围。我们发现,地形粗糙度较低的湿地可能有更高的潜力提供滨鸟栖息地,并且战略性地降低水位可以增加栖息地的范围。在 4 月初迁徙高峰期,超过 50%的湿地在<10%的面积内提供了最优栖息地,而且大多数湿地只提供了短暂的浅水栖息地。与 2016 年春季迁徙高峰期实际测量的水量相比,减少水量可使最优栖息地的比例增加 1-1678%(平均值为 294%)。对于具有高栖息地潜力的湿地,更早开始湿地退水并延长退水时间,可以在滨鸟迁徙高峰期显著改善栖息地条件。随着更多的高分辨率地形(如激光雷达、无人机图像摄影测量)和光学遥感数据(如行星图像、无人机摄影)的出现,我们的方法可以适应更广泛的空间尺度,跟踪动态水文变化。