Point Blue Conservation Science, Petaluma, California, United States of America.
Audubon California, Sacramento, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 Oct 21;15(10):e0240931. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0240931. eCollection 2020.
Conservation of migratory species requires anticipating the potential impacts of extreme climatic events, such as extreme drought. During drought, reduced habitat availability for shorebirds creates the potential for changes in their abundance and distribution, in part because many species are highly mobile and rely on networks of interior and coastal habitats. Understanding how shorebirds responded to a recent drought cycle that peaked from 2013 to 2015 in central California, USA, will help optimize management of wetlands and fresh water for wildlife. In the Central Valley, a vast interior region that is characterized by a mosaic of wetlands and agricultural lands, we found 22% and 29% decreases in the annual abundance of shorebirds during periods of 3-year drought (2013-2015) and 2-year extreme drought (2014-2015), respectively, when compared to non-drought years. Lower abundance of shorebirds coincided with significant decreases in the mean proportion flooded of survey units (7% and 9%, respectively) that were reliant on fresh water. Drought was associated with lower abundance within both the interior Central Valley and coastal San Francisco Bay for greater and lesser yellowlegs (Tringa melanoleuca and T. flavipes) and long- and short-billed dowitchers (Limnodromus scolopaceus and L. griseus). Only dunlins (Calidris alpina) had patterns of abundance that suggested substantial shifts in distribution between the Central Valley and coastal regions of San Francisco Bay and Point Reyes. Our results indicate that drought has the potential to reduce, at least temporally, shorebird populations and flooded habitat in the Central Valley, and the ability to respond to drought by taking advantage of nearby coastal habitats may limit the long-term effects of drought on some species. Successful conservation strategies must balance the impacts of reduced habitat availability at interior sites with the ability of some migratory shorebirds to adapt rapidly to shifting distributions of resources.
保护迁徙物种需要预测极端气候事件的潜在影响,如极端干旱。在干旱期间,滨鸟的栖息地可用性减少,这可能导致其数量和分布发生变化,部分原因是许多物种具有高度流动性,依赖内陆和沿海栖息地网络。了解滨鸟对 2013 年至 2015 年在美国加利福尼亚州中部达到高峰的最近一个干旱周期的反应,将有助于优化湿地和淡水的野生动物管理。在内陆广阔的中央谷地区,湿地和农业用地交织在一起,我们发现,在为期 3 年的干旱期(2013-2015 年)和 2 年的极端干旱期(2014-2015 年),滨鸟的年数量分别减少了 22%和 29%,与非干旱年份相比。滨鸟数量减少的同时,调查单位(分别为 7%和 9%)的平均淹没比例也显著下降,这些单位依赖于淡水。在内部中央谷和沿海旧金山湾,大、小黄脚鹬(Tringa melanoleuca 和 T. flavipes)和长短嘴杓鹬(Limnodromus scolopaceus 和 L. griseus)的数量都与干旱有关。只有黑腹滨鹬(Calidris alpina)的数量模式表明,在中央谷和旧金山湾沿海地区和雷耶斯角之间有大量的分布转移。我们的研究结果表明,干旱有可能减少中央谷地区滨鸟的数量和淹没栖息地,至少在短期内是如此,而利用附近沿海栖息地对干旱做出反应的能力可能会限制一些物种受到干旱的长期影响。成功的保护策略必须平衡内陆地区栖息地可用性减少的影响,以及一些候鸟适应资源不断变化的分布的能力。