Hallworth Michael T, Bayne Erin, McKinnon Emily, Love Oliver, Tremblay Junior A, Drolet Bruno, Ibarzabal Jacques, Van Wilgenburg Steven, Marra Peter P
Migratory Bird Center, Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute. Washington, DC 20008, USA.
University of Alberta, Alberta, Canada.
Proc Biol Sci. 2021 Apr 28;288(1949):20203164. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2020.3164.
Many migratory species are declining and for most, the proximate causes of their declines remain unknown. For many long-distance Neotropical migratory songbirds, it is assumed that habitat loss on breeding or non-breeding grounds is a primary driver of population declines. We integrated data collected from tracking technology, community science and remote sensing data to quantify migratory connectivity (MC), population trends and habitat loss. We quantified the correlation between forest change throughout the annual cycle and population declines of a long-distance migratory songbird, the Connecticut warbler (, observed decline: -8.99% yr). MC, the geographic link between populations during two or more phases of the annual cycle, was stronger between breeding and autumn migration routes (MC = 0.24 ± 0.23) than between breeding and non-breeding locations (MC = -0.2 ± 0.14). Different Connecticut warbler populations tended to have population-specific fall migration routes but overlapped almost completely within the northern Gran Chaco ecoregion in South America. Cumulative forest loss within 50 km of breeding locations and the resulting decline in the largest forested patch index was correlated more strongly with population declines than forest loss on migratory stopover regions or on wintering locations in South America, suggesting that habitat loss during the breeding season is a driver of observed population declines for the Connecticut warbler. Land-use practices that retain large, forested patches within landscapes will likely benefit breeding populations of this declining songbird, but further research is needed to help inform land-use practices across the full annual cycle to minimize the impacts to migratory songbirds and abate ongoing population declines.
许多迁徙物种数量正在减少,而对于大多数物种来说,其数量减少的直接原因仍不明确。对于许多新热带地区的长途迁徙鸣禽而言,人们认为繁殖地或非繁殖地的栖息地丧失是种群数量减少的主要驱动因素。我们整合了从追踪技术、社区科学以及遥感数据中收集到的数据,以量化迁徙连通性(MC)、种群趋势和栖息地丧失情况。我们量化了整个年度周期内森林变化与一种长途迁徙鸣禽——康涅狄格林莺种群数量减少之间的相关性(观察到的下降率:每年-8.99%)。MC是年度周期两个或多个阶段种群之间的地理联系,繁殖地与秋季迁徙路线之间的MC(MC = 0.24 ± 0.23)比繁殖地与非繁殖地之间的MC(MC = -0.2 ± 0.14)更强。不同的康涅狄格林莺种群往往有特定种群的秋季迁徙路线,但几乎完全重叠于南美洲北部大查科生态区范围内。繁殖地50公里范围内的累计森林丧失以及由此导致的最大森林斑块指数下降,与种群数量减少的相关性比在迁徙中途停歇区或南美洲越冬地的森林丧失更强,这表明繁殖季节的栖息地丧失是康涅狄格林莺种群数量减少的一个驱动因素。在景观中保留大片森林斑块的土地利用方式可能会使这种数量减少的鸣禽的繁殖种群受益,但需要进一步研究以指导全年的土地利用方式,从而尽量减少对迁徙鸣禽的影响并减缓当前的种群数量下降。