Aerial Photographic Surveys of Seabird Breeding Colonies

Seabirds are an important component of healthy marine ecosystems given their status as apex predators, and are readily accessible indicators of change in marine ecosystems. The North Coast Study Region baseline monitoring program provides a means of evaluating the region-wide effect of a network MPA...

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Main Authors: Barton, Daniel, Capitolo, Phil
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: KNB Data Repository 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5063/f1ft8j46
https://knb.ecoinformatics.org/view/doi:10.5063/F1FT8J46
id ftdatacite:10.5063/f1ft8j46
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5063/f1ft8j46 2023-05-15T15:56:03+02:00 Aerial Photographic Surveys of Seabird Breeding Colonies Barton, Daniel Capitolo, Phil 2017 text/xml https://dx.doi.org/10.5063/f1ft8j46 https://knb.ecoinformatics.org/view/doi:10.5063/F1FT8J46 en eng KNB Data Repository North CoastBaseline Characterization of SeabirdsAerial Photographic Surveys of Seabird Breeding Colonies2000 to 2014 Ecological data Photos Non-Consumptive Uses Seabird Dataset dataset 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5063/f1ft8j46 2022-04-01T09:51:46Z Seabirds are an important component of healthy marine ecosystems given their status as apex predators, and are readily accessible indicators of change in marine ecosystems. The North Coast Study Region baseline monitoring program provides a means of evaluating the region-wide effect of a network MPAs. The reported data and seabird population trends represent a region-wide baseline for seabird populations in 2014 and change in population size over the 26-year time period from 1989-2014. We report a region-wide survey of seabird colonies in the NCSR in 2014 from aerial photography, and analysis of colony population growth using aerial surveys from 1989-2014. We report region-wide counts of colony attendance or nests of 3 readily-observed piscivorous seabird species, Common Murre (N = 350,923 attending individuals), Brandt’s Cormorant (N = 4,583 nests), and Double-crested Cormorant (N = 1,840 nests) from a complete aerial survey of the region’s colonies in 2014. These individuals were spread across 32 colonies, including 6 now in special closures and 9 located in or adjacent to marine reserves or marine conservation areas. We also report a region-wide trend analysis of seabird colonies in the NCSR from 1989-2014. Aerial survey photographs were previously collected by numerous collaborators, and some photographs not previously counted from 1989-2013 were counted as part of this project. Additionally, data were provided by numerous collaborators for use in this trend analysis and were combined with data collected as part of the NCSR baseline monitoring program. We used 173 observations of Common Murre colony attendance at 14 colonies or sub-colonies over the 26-year study period to estimate a mean overall growth rate of 4.0% (range: -7.3% to 14.1%; Summary Figure 1). We report colony-specific annual growth rates that varied in space and time, but overall, show a pattern of increase in Common Murre colony attendance in the region. Dataset Common Murre DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic North CoastBaseline Characterization of SeabirdsAerial Photographic Surveys of Seabird Breeding Colonies2000 to 2014
Ecological data
Photos
Non-Consumptive Uses
Seabird
spellingShingle North CoastBaseline Characterization of SeabirdsAerial Photographic Surveys of Seabird Breeding Colonies2000 to 2014
Ecological data
Photos
Non-Consumptive Uses
Seabird
Barton, Daniel
Capitolo, Phil
Aerial Photographic Surveys of Seabird Breeding Colonies
topic_facet North CoastBaseline Characterization of SeabirdsAerial Photographic Surveys of Seabird Breeding Colonies2000 to 2014
Ecological data
Photos
Non-Consumptive Uses
Seabird
description Seabirds are an important component of healthy marine ecosystems given their status as apex predators, and are readily accessible indicators of change in marine ecosystems. The North Coast Study Region baseline monitoring program provides a means of evaluating the region-wide effect of a network MPAs. The reported data and seabird population trends represent a region-wide baseline for seabird populations in 2014 and change in population size over the 26-year time period from 1989-2014. We report a region-wide survey of seabird colonies in the NCSR in 2014 from aerial photography, and analysis of colony population growth using aerial surveys from 1989-2014. We report region-wide counts of colony attendance or nests of 3 readily-observed piscivorous seabird species, Common Murre (N = 350,923 attending individuals), Brandt’s Cormorant (N = 4,583 nests), and Double-crested Cormorant (N = 1,840 nests) from a complete aerial survey of the region’s colonies in 2014. These individuals were spread across 32 colonies, including 6 now in special closures and 9 located in or adjacent to marine reserves or marine conservation areas. We also report a region-wide trend analysis of seabird colonies in the NCSR from 1989-2014. Aerial survey photographs were previously collected by numerous collaborators, and some photographs not previously counted from 1989-2013 were counted as part of this project. Additionally, data were provided by numerous collaborators for use in this trend analysis and were combined with data collected as part of the NCSR baseline monitoring program. We used 173 observations of Common Murre colony attendance at 14 colonies or sub-colonies over the 26-year study period to estimate a mean overall growth rate of 4.0% (range: -7.3% to 14.1%; Summary Figure 1). We report colony-specific annual growth rates that varied in space and time, but overall, show a pattern of increase in Common Murre colony attendance in the region.
format Dataset
author Barton, Daniel
Capitolo, Phil
author_facet Barton, Daniel
Capitolo, Phil
author_sort Barton, Daniel
title Aerial Photographic Surveys of Seabird Breeding Colonies
title_short Aerial Photographic Surveys of Seabird Breeding Colonies
title_full Aerial Photographic Surveys of Seabird Breeding Colonies
title_fullStr Aerial Photographic Surveys of Seabird Breeding Colonies
title_full_unstemmed Aerial Photographic Surveys of Seabird Breeding Colonies
title_sort aerial photographic surveys of seabird breeding colonies
publisher KNB Data Repository
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5063/f1ft8j46
https://knb.ecoinformatics.org/view/doi:10.5063/F1FT8J46
genre Common Murre
genre_facet Common Murre
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5063/f1ft8j46
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