How well do regional or national Breeding Bird Survey data predict songbird population trends at an intact boreal site?

A study to monitor boreal songbird trends was initiated in 1998 in a relatively undisturbed and remote part of the boreal forest in the Northwest Territories, Canada. Eight years of point count data were collected over the 14 years of the study, 1998-2011. Trends were estimated for 50 bird species u...

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Published in:Avian Conservation and Ecology
Main Authors: Craig S. Machtans, Kevin J. Kardynal, Paul A. Smith
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2014
Subjects:
psy
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5751/ACE-00649-090105
https://doaj.org/article/7ffdf22ddc6b46fe93e54a37c1fb2466
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:7ffdf22ddc6b46fe93e54a37c1fb2466 2023-05-15T16:17:29+02:00 How well do regional or national Breeding Bird Survey data predict songbird population trends at an intact boreal site? Craig S. Machtans Kevin J. Kardynal Paul A. Smith 2014-06-01 https://doi.org/10.5751/ACE-00649-090105 https://doaj.org/article/7ffdf22ddc6b46fe93e54a37c1fb2466 en eng Resilience Alliance 1712-6568 doi:10.5751/ACE-00649-090105 https://doaj.org/article/7ffdf22ddc6b46fe93e54a37c1fb2466 undefined Avian Conservation and Ecology, Vol 9, Iss 1, p 5 (2014) boreal forest generalized linear mixed-effects model Northwest Territories observer variability population trend spruce budworm envir psy Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2014 fttriple https://doi.org/10.5751/ACE-00649-090105 2023-01-22T19:27:36Z A study to monitor boreal songbird trends was initiated in 1998 in a relatively undisturbed and remote part of the boreal forest in the Northwest Territories, Canada. Eight years of point count data were collected over the 14 years of the study, 1998-2011. Trends were estimated for 50 bird species using generalized linear mixed-effects models, with random effects to account for temporal (repeat sampling within years) and spatial (stations within stands) autocorrelation and variability associated with multiple observers. We tested whether regional and national Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) trends could, on average, predict trends in our study area. Significant increases in our study area outnumbered decreases by 12 species to 6, an opposite pattern compared to Alberta (6 versus 15, respectively) and Canada (9 versus 20). Twenty-two species with relatively precise trend estimates (precision to detect > 30% decline in 10 years; observed SE ≤ 3.7%/year) showed nonsignificant trends, similar to Alberta (24) and Canada (20). Precision-weighted trends for a sample of 19 species with both reliable trends at our site and small portions of their range covered by BBS in Canada were, on average, more negative for Alberta (1.34% per year lower) and for Canada (1.15% per year lower) relative to Fort Liard, though 95% credible intervals still contained zero. We suggest that part of the differences could be attributable to local resource pulses (insect outbreak). However, we also suggest that the tendency for BBS route coverage to disproportionately sample more southerly, developed areas in the boreal forest could result in BBS trends that are not representative of range-wide trends for species whose range is centred farther north. Article in Journal/Newspaper Fort Liard Northwest Territories Unknown Canada Fort Liard ENVELOPE(-123.474,-123.474,60.239,60.239) Liard ENVELOPE(-67.417,-67.417,-66.850,-66.850) Northwest Territories Avian Conservation and Ecology 9 1
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic boreal forest
generalized linear mixed-effects model
Northwest Territories
observer variability
population trend
spruce budworm
envir
psy
spellingShingle boreal forest
generalized linear mixed-effects model
Northwest Territories
observer variability
population trend
spruce budworm
envir
psy
Craig S. Machtans
Kevin J. Kardynal
Paul A. Smith
How well do regional or national Breeding Bird Survey data predict songbird population trends at an intact boreal site?
topic_facet boreal forest
generalized linear mixed-effects model
Northwest Territories
observer variability
population trend
spruce budworm
envir
psy
description A study to monitor boreal songbird trends was initiated in 1998 in a relatively undisturbed and remote part of the boreal forest in the Northwest Territories, Canada. Eight years of point count data were collected over the 14 years of the study, 1998-2011. Trends were estimated for 50 bird species using generalized linear mixed-effects models, with random effects to account for temporal (repeat sampling within years) and spatial (stations within stands) autocorrelation and variability associated with multiple observers. We tested whether regional and national Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) trends could, on average, predict trends in our study area. Significant increases in our study area outnumbered decreases by 12 species to 6, an opposite pattern compared to Alberta (6 versus 15, respectively) and Canada (9 versus 20). Twenty-two species with relatively precise trend estimates (precision to detect > 30% decline in 10 years; observed SE ≤ 3.7%/year) showed nonsignificant trends, similar to Alberta (24) and Canada (20). Precision-weighted trends for a sample of 19 species with both reliable trends at our site and small portions of their range covered by BBS in Canada were, on average, more negative for Alberta (1.34% per year lower) and for Canada (1.15% per year lower) relative to Fort Liard, though 95% credible intervals still contained zero. We suggest that part of the differences could be attributable to local resource pulses (insect outbreak). However, we also suggest that the tendency for BBS route coverage to disproportionately sample more southerly, developed areas in the boreal forest could result in BBS trends that are not representative of range-wide trends for species whose range is centred farther north.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Craig S. Machtans
Kevin J. Kardynal
Paul A. Smith
author_facet Craig S. Machtans
Kevin J. Kardynal
Paul A. Smith
author_sort Craig S. Machtans
title How well do regional or national Breeding Bird Survey data predict songbird population trends at an intact boreal site?
title_short How well do regional or national Breeding Bird Survey data predict songbird population trends at an intact boreal site?
title_full How well do regional or national Breeding Bird Survey data predict songbird population trends at an intact boreal site?
title_fullStr How well do regional or national Breeding Bird Survey data predict songbird population trends at an intact boreal site?
title_full_unstemmed How well do regional or national Breeding Bird Survey data predict songbird population trends at an intact boreal site?
title_sort how well do regional or national breeding bird survey data predict songbird population trends at an intact boreal site?
publisher Resilience Alliance
publishDate 2014
url https://doi.org/10.5751/ACE-00649-090105
https://doaj.org/article/7ffdf22ddc6b46fe93e54a37c1fb2466
long_lat ENVELOPE(-123.474,-123.474,60.239,60.239)
ENVELOPE(-67.417,-67.417,-66.850,-66.850)
geographic Canada
Fort Liard
Liard
Northwest Territories
geographic_facet Canada
Fort Liard
Liard
Northwest Territories
genre Fort Liard
Northwest Territories
genre_facet Fort Liard
Northwest Territories
op_source Avian Conservation and Ecology, Vol 9, Iss 1, p 5 (2014)
op_relation 1712-6568
doi:10.5751/ACE-00649-090105
https://doaj.org/article/7ffdf22ddc6b46fe93e54a37c1fb2466
op_rights undefined
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5751/ACE-00649-090105
container_title Avian Conservation and Ecology
container_volume 9
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