Institute for Environmental Studies, Faculty of Science, Charles University, Prague, Benátská 2, 128 01, Prague 2, Czech Republic.
Department of Zoology and Laboratory of Ornithology, Faculty of Science, Palacký University in Olomouc, Olomouc, Czech Republic.
Naturwissenschaften. 2021 Feb 12;108(2):9. doi: 10.1007/s00114-021-01717-1.
Linking population trends to species' traits is informative for the detection of the most important threatening factors and for assessing the effectiveness of conservation measures. Although some previous studies performed such an analysis at local to continental scales, the global-scale focus is the most relevant for conservation of the entire species. Here we evaluate information on global population trends of shorebirds, a widely distributed and ecologically diversified group, where some species connect different parts of the world by migration, while others are residents. Nowadays, shorebirds face rapid environmental changes caused by various human activities and climate change. Numerous signs of regional population declines have been recently reported in response to these threats. The aim of our study was to test whether breeding and non-breeding habitats, migratory behaviour (migrants vs. residents) and migration distance, breeding latitude, generation time and breeding range size mirror species' global population trends. We found that a majority of shorebird species have declined globally. After accounting for the influence of traits and species taxonomy, linear mixed-effects models showed that populations of migratory shorebirds decreased more than populations of residents. Besides that, declines were more frequent for species breeding at high latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere, but these patterns did not hold after excluding the non-migratory species. Our findings suggest that factors linked to migration, such as habitat loss as well as deterioration at stop-over or wintering sites and a pronounced climate change impact at high latitudes, are possible drivers of the observed worldwide population decreases.
将人口趋势与物种特征联系起来,有助于发现最重要的威胁因素,并评估保护措施的有效性。虽然之前的一些研究在局部到大陆尺度上进行了这种分析,但全球尺度的研究对于保护整个物种最为重要。在这里,我们评估了滨鸟全球种群趋势的信息,滨鸟是一个分布广泛且生态多样化的群体,其中一些物种通过迁徙将世界的不同地区连接起来,而另一些则是留鸟。如今,滨鸟面临着由各种人类活动和气候变化引起的快速环境变化。最近有报道称,由于这些威胁,许多地区的滨鸟种群数量出现了下降。我们研究的目的是检验繁殖和非繁殖栖息地、迁徙行为(迁徙鸟和留鸟)和迁徙距离、繁殖纬度、世代时间和繁殖范围大小是否反映了物种的全球种群趋势。我们发现,大多数滨鸟物种在全球范围内数量减少。在考虑了特征和物种分类学的影响后,线性混合效应模型表明,迁徙滨鸟的数量下降超过了留鸟的数量。此外,在北半球高纬度繁殖的物种的下降更为频繁,但在排除非迁徙物种后,这些模式就不再成立。我们的研究结果表明,与迁徙相关的因素,如栖息地丧失,以及中途停留或越冬地的恶化,以及高纬度地区明显的气候变化影响,可能是导致全球范围内观察到的种群减少的原因。