The Arctic Species Trend Index: Migratory Birds Index

This report aims to describe the broad-scale trends necessary for designing and targeting informed conservation strategies at the flyway level to address these reported declines. To do this, we examine abundance change in selected Arctic breeding bird species, incorporating information from both ins...

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Main Authors: Deinet, S., Zöckler, C., Jacoby, D., Tresize, E., Marconi, V., McRae, L., Svobods, M., Barry, T.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna (CAFF). 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11374/1316
id ftarcticcouncil:oai:https://oaarchive.arctic-council.org:11374/1316
record_format openpolar
spelling ftarcticcouncil:oai:https://oaarchive.arctic-council.org:11374/1316 2024-09-15T17:50:05+00:00 The Arctic Species Trend Index: Migratory Birds Index Deinet, S. Zöckler, C. Jacoby, D. Tresize, E. Marconi, V. McRae, L. Svobods, M. Barry, T. 2015 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11374/1316 en eng Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna (CAFF). CAFF Assessment Series; Deinet, S., Zöckler, C., Jacoby, D., Tresize, E., Marconi, V., McRae, L., Svobods, M., & Barry, T. (2015). The Arctic Species Trend Index: Migratory Birds Index. Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna, Akureyri, Iceland. 978-9935-431-44-8 http://hdl.handle.net/11374/1316 CAFF Migratory birds Summary Report 2015 ftarcticcouncil 2024-07-05T03:05:32Z This report aims to describe the broad-scale trends necessary for designing and targeting informed conservation strategies at the flyway level to address these reported declines. To do this, we examine abundance change in selected Arctic breeding bird species, incorporating information from both inside and outside the Arctic (Figure 1) to capture possible influences at different points during a species’ annual cycle. The inclusion of trend information from non-Arctic locations confers a number of other advantages: data are readily available from key sites where individuals congregate in large, easy-to-count flocks; and adding these data allows for better disaggregation of trends due to larger data set size, thus providing the opportunity to elucidate the regional differences that have already been reported in the literature (Zöckler et al. 2013). Importantly, this addition also makes sense politically as the selected species are dependent on interconnected sites across the globe, meaning that suitable and effective conservation strategies can only be devised through international collaboration. CAFF (S.D. and D.J.), WWF International (L.M.), the Zoological Society of London (R.F.) and CMS. Other/Unknown Material Arctic CAFF Arctic Council Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Council Repository
op_collection_id ftarcticcouncil
language English
topic CAFF
Migratory birds
spellingShingle CAFF
Migratory birds
Deinet, S.
Zöckler, C.
Jacoby, D.
Tresize, E.
Marconi, V.
McRae, L.
Svobods, M.
Barry, T.
The Arctic Species Trend Index: Migratory Birds Index
topic_facet CAFF
Migratory birds
description This report aims to describe the broad-scale trends necessary for designing and targeting informed conservation strategies at the flyway level to address these reported declines. To do this, we examine abundance change in selected Arctic breeding bird species, incorporating information from both inside and outside the Arctic (Figure 1) to capture possible influences at different points during a species’ annual cycle. The inclusion of trend information from non-Arctic locations confers a number of other advantages: data are readily available from key sites where individuals congregate in large, easy-to-count flocks; and adding these data allows for better disaggregation of trends due to larger data set size, thus providing the opportunity to elucidate the regional differences that have already been reported in the literature (Zöckler et al. 2013). Importantly, this addition also makes sense politically as the selected species are dependent on interconnected sites across the globe, meaning that suitable and effective conservation strategies can only be devised through international collaboration. CAFF (S.D. and D.J.), WWF International (L.M.), the Zoological Society of London (R.F.) and CMS.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Deinet, S.
Zöckler, C.
Jacoby, D.
Tresize, E.
Marconi, V.
McRae, L.
Svobods, M.
Barry, T.
author_facet Deinet, S.
Zöckler, C.
Jacoby, D.
Tresize, E.
Marconi, V.
McRae, L.
Svobods, M.
Barry, T.
author_sort Deinet, S.
title The Arctic Species Trend Index: Migratory Birds Index
title_short The Arctic Species Trend Index: Migratory Birds Index
title_full The Arctic Species Trend Index: Migratory Birds Index
title_fullStr The Arctic Species Trend Index: Migratory Birds Index
title_full_unstemmed The Arctic Species Trend Index: Migratory Birds Index
title_sort arctic species trend index: migratory birds index
publisher Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna (CAFF).
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11374/1316
genre Arctic
CAFF
genre_facet Arctic
CAFF
op_relation CAFF Assessment Series;
Deinet, S., Zöckler, C., Jacoby, D., Tresize, E., Marconi, V., McRae, L., Svobods, M., & Barry, T. (2015). The Arctic Species Trend Index: Migratory Birds Index. Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna, Akureyri, Iceland.
978-9935-431-44-8
http://hdl.handle.net/11374/1316
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