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Continental-scale decreases in shorebird populations in Australia

Version 2 2024-06-03, 13:13
Version 1 2016-04-15, 07:53
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 13:13 authored by RS Clemens, DI Rogers, BD Hansen, K Gosbell, CDT Minton, P Straw, M Bamford, EJ Woehler, DA Milton, Mike WestonMike Weston, B Venables, D Weller, C Hassell, B Rutherford, K Onton, A Herrod, CE Studds, CY Choi, KL Dhanjal-Adams, NJ Murray, GA Skilleter, RA Fuller
Decreases in shorebird populations are increasingly evident worldwide, especially in the East Asian–Australasian Flyway (EAAF). To arrest these declines, it is important to understand the scale of both the problem and the solutions. We analysed an expansive Australian citizen-science dataset, spanning the period 1973 to 2014, to explore factors related to differences in trends among shorebird populations in wetlands throughout Australia. Of seven resident Australian shorebird species, the four inland species exhibited continental decreases, whereas the three coastal species did not. Decreases in inland resident shorebirds were related to changes in availability of water at non-tidal wetlands, suggesting that degradation of wetlands in Australia’s interior is playing a role in these declines. For migratory shorebirds, the analyses revealed continental decreases in abundance in 12 of 19 species, and decreases in 17 of 19 in the southern half of Australia over the past 15 years. Many trends were strongly associated with continental gradients in latitude or longitude, suggesting some large-scale patterns in the decreases, with steeper declines often evident in southern Australia. After accounting for this effect, local variables did not explain variation in migratory shorebird trends between sites. Our results are consistent with other studies indicating that decreases in migratory shorebird populations in the EAAF are most likely being driven primarily by factors outside Australia. This reinforces the need for urgent overseas conservation actions. However, substantially heterogeneous trends within Australia, combined with declines of inland resident shorebirds indicate effective management of Australian shorebird habitat remains important.

History

Journal

Emu

Volume

116

Season

Online Early

Pagination

119-135

Location

Melbourne, Vic.

ISSN

0158-4197

eISSN

1448-5540

Language

English

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, CSIRO Publishing

Issue

2

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS AUSTRALIA