Dispersión de larga distancia en una población amenazada en recuperación de aves playeras facilita la recolonización de sitios de anidación históricos luego de décadas de haber sido extirpada.

Translated title of the contribution: Long-distance dispersal in a recovering endangered shorebird population facilitates recolonization of historical nesting sites following decades of extirpation

Andrew David Brown, Francesca Cuthbert, Alice Van Zoeren, Stephanie Schubel, Erica Nol

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

After extirpation from most of the Great Lakes by the 1980s, the Piping Plover (Charadrius melodus circumcinctus) did not nest again outside Michigan until 1998. The number of Plovers breeding in the region has gradually increased, with nesting locations expanding from Michigan. We studied the pattern of dispersers recolonizing their historical range after near extirpation using data from individually identifiable banded birds. Objectives were to determine if: (1) the origin of the first recolonizing individuals was Michigan; (2) dispersers remained within the Great Lakes population boundaries; (3) colonizing individuals were mainly natal dispersers; and (4) dispersal distances differed between the sexes and between natal and breeding dispersers. Finally, we tested the effects of time (year), yearly average Great Lakes water-level anomalies, and number of breeding pairs per year in Michigan on the rate of colonization outside Michigan. Plovers recolonized the Great Lakes primarily via recruits from Michigan. Additionally, six individuals were recorded leaving the Great Lakes and colonizing locations within Northern Great Plains and Atlantic Coast population boundaries. Colonizers dispersed on average 489.0 ± 55.0 km with no significant differences in distances between males and females or between natal and breeding dispersal events. No significant effect was found of water-level anomalies or number of breeding pairs in Michigan on the number of colonizers, but there was a positive effect of year. Our findings demonstrate that birds will return to sites unused for decades if the habitat is still suitable. The results also identify key locations that can support the continued growth of the endangered Great Lakes Piping Plover population as it increases toward recovery goals.

Translated title of the contributionLong-distance dispersal in a recovering endangered shorebird population facilitates recolonization of historical nesting sites following decades of extirpation
Original languageSpanish
Article number7
JournalJournal of Field Ornithology
Volume93
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 2022

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
We thank the many people in the USA and Canada who discovered and reported nesting plovers at new locations, and the agency biologists and volunteers who worked to ensure Plover success at each site. In particular, we would like to thank the Canadian Wildlife Service and Birds Canada for providing very useful data and feedback during the early development of this project. We also acknowledge anonymous reviewers who offered very helpful advice and comments on an earlier version of this manuscript. This study was funded by the Great Lakes Protection Initiative and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; F. Cuthbert was supported by funds from the Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station. Finally, we acknowledge the support of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council for funding A. Brown during his graduate studies.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 by the author(s).

Keywords

  • Charadrius melodus circumcinctus
  • distribution patterns
  • Great Lakes
  • Michigan
  • water levels

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