Breeding shorebird observation data including degree of oiling for shorebirds in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Texas, 2010-2011

This report contains breeding shorebird observation data, and provides additional context for the posted dataset, including information about the collection, analysis, and organization of the data. Characteristics of this dataset include the following: • The breeding shorebird data focus primarily o...

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Bibliographic Details
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative 2017
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Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/BP-x750-000-0019-0003
Description
Summary:This report contains breeding shorebird observation data, and provides additional context for the posted dataset, including information about the collection, analysis, and organization of the data. Characteristics of this dataset include the following: • The breeding shorebird data focus primarily on Wilson’s plovers, snowy plovers, and American oystercatchers, as well as other breeding shorebirds in the project area. • This dataset includes data initially collected independently by Trustees. • Before posting, extensive work was done independently by BP contractors to verify some aspects of the posted data (e.g., positional coordinates and field data). Data were collected by shore-based observers working in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Texas in the summer of 2010 and again in the summer of 2011. The data were collected independently by the Trustees under the work plan titled Gulf Coast Breeding, Beach-Nesting Bird Populations in Areas Impacted by the BP Deepwater Horizon / Mississippi Canyon 252 Oil Spill: Bird Study No. 8, including the associated 2011 addendum. This dataset includes data associated with breeding shorebird site conditions, live bird counts, and assessments to categorize the degree of visible oil on live birds. Each observed bird was categorized as not visibly oiled or as having trace (≤5 percent), light (6 to 20 percent), moderate (21 to 40 percent), or heavy (>40 percent) oiling. Photographs of birds were taken where possible. The methods used to collect live bird visible oiling data were similar to those that guided the collection of data associated with the Live Bird Oiling Data Publication Summary Report (Reference No. B-01v01-02). Sampling variations may exist across observers, methods, locations, and times.