Trends in the abundance of farmland birds: a quantitative comparison of smoothed Common Birds Census indices

1. Widespread declines in the populations of many British farmland birds have occurred since the early 1970s, We must understand the causes of these declines to make recommendations about conservation and agricultural management, and this can be approached by investigating the relationships, across...

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Main Authors: Siriwardena, GM, Baillie, SR, Buckland, Stephen Terrence, Fewster, RM, Marchant, JH, Wilson, JD
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/researchoutput/trends-in-the-abundance-of-farmland-birds-a-quantitative-comparison-of-smoothed-common-birds-census-indices(f8056ec1-15af-4372-86ef-7295e161467b).html
http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0031980504&partnerID=8YFLogxK
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spelling ftunstandrewcris:oai:research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk:publications/f8056ec1-15af-4372-86ef-7295e161467b 2024-06-23T07:45:04+00:00 Trends in the abundance of farmland birds: a quantitative comparison of smoothed Common Birds Census indices Siriwardena, GM Baillie, SR Buckland, Stephen Terrence Fewster, RM Marchant, JH Wilson, JD 1998-02 https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/researchoutput/trends-in-the-abundance-of-farmland-birds-a-quantitative-comparison-of-smoothed-common-birds-census-indices(f8056ec1-15af-4372-86ef-7295e161467b).html http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0031980504&partnerID=8YFLogxK eng eng https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/researchoutput/trends-in-the-abundance-of-farmland-birds-a-quantitative-comparison-of-smoothed-common-birds-census-indices(f8056ec1-15af-4372-86ef-7295e161467b).html info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Siriwardena , GM , Baillie , SR , Buckland , S T , Fewster , RM , Marchant , JH & Wilson , JD 1998 , ' Trends in the abundance of farmland birds: a quantitative comparison of smoothed Common Birds Census indices ' , Journal of Applied Ecology , vol. 35 , pp. 24-43 . agriculture bird populations conservation environmental change turning points POPULATION TRENDS BRITAIN PASSERINES IRELAND article 1998 ftunstandrewcris 2024-06-13T00:10:12Z 1. Widespread declines in the populations of many British farmland birds have occurred since the early 1970s, We must understand the causes of these declines to make recommendations about conservation and agricultural management, and this can be approached by investigating the relationships, across species, between abundance and agricultural change. We describe novel, quantitative approaches to the interpretation of abundance indices from which reliable inferences about conservation status can be made. 2. We calculated farmland Common Birds Census indices for 42 species, smoothed the series to reveal underlying trends and estimated confidence intervals for the changes in abundance. 3. Between 1968 and 1995, the abundance of 12 species declined significantly and that of 14 species increased. 4. Specialization was the only significant determinant of changes in abundance (of 10 tests against species characteristics): 13 farmland specialists declined, on average, by 30%, whilst 29 more generalist species underwent an average increase of 23%, confirming that farmland birds should engender conservation concern. 5. Smoothed abundance curves, transformed to emphasize trend direction and timing, were then compared quantitatively to identify whether groups of species had shared common trends. 6. Species tended not to be strongly grouped, but small groups of species with common trends were identified. Similarities in ecology among grouped species clarify the possible environmental causes of their population trends, indicating future research priorities. 7. The groups identified included: one group consisting of three thrush species Turdus and the skylark Alauda arvensis L. which all declined from the mid-1970s after being stable previously; one group comprising three trans-Saharan migrant warblers (Sylvidae), whose abundance fell in the early 1970s and later increased, and a diverse group of six smoothly increasing species. 8. Turning points were identified as where each species' population trend turned significantly, ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Alauda arvensis University of St Andrews: Research Portal
institution Open Polar
collection University of St Andrews: Research Portal
op_collection_id ftunstandrewcris
language English
topic agriculture
bird populations
conservation
environmental change
turning points
POPULATION TRENDS
BRITAIN
PASSERINES
IRELAND
spellingShingle agriculture
bird populations
conservation
environmental change
turning points
POPULATION TRENDS
BRITAIN
PASSERINES
IRELAND
Siriwardena, GM
Baillie, SR
Buckland, Stephen Terrence
Fewster, RM
Marchant, JH
Wilson, JD
Trends in the abundance of farmland birds: a quantitative comparison of smoothed Common Birds Census indices
topic_facet agriculture
bird populations
conservation
environmental change
turning points
POPULATION TRENDS
BRITAIN
PASSERINES
IRELAND
description 1. Widespread declines in the populations of many British farmland birds have occurred since the early 1970s, We must understand the causes of these declines to make recommendations about conservation and agricultural management, and this can be approached by investigating the relationships, across species, between abundance and agricultural change. We describe novel, quantitative approaches to the interpretation of abundance indices from which reliable inferences about conservation status can be made. 2. We calculated farmland Common Birds Census indices for 42 species, smoothed the series to reveal underlying trends and estimated confidence intervals for the changes in abundance. 3. Between 1968 and 1995, the abundance of 12 species declined significantly and that of 14 species increased. 4. Specialization was the only significant determinant of changes in abundance (of 10 tests against species characteristics): 13 farmland specialists declined, on average, by 30%, whilst 29 more generalist species underwent an average increase of 23%, confirming that farmland birds should engender conservation concern. 5. Smoothed abundance curves, transformed to emphasize trend direction and timing, were then compared quantitatively to identify whether groups of species had shared common trends. 6. Species tended not to be strongly grouped, but small groups of species with common trends were identified. Similarities in ecology among grouped species clarify the possible environmental causes of their population trends, indicating future research priorities. 7. The groups identified included: one group consisting of three thrush species Turdus and the skylark Alauda arvensis L. which all declined from the mid-1970s after being stable previously; one group comprising three trans-Saharan migrant warblers (Sylvidae), whose abundance fell in the early 1970s and later increased, and a diverse group of six smoothly increasing species. 8. Turning points were identified as where each species' population trend turned significantly, ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Siriwardena, GM
Baillie, SR
Buckland, Stephen Terrence
Fewster, RM
Marchant, JH
Wilson, JD
author_facet Siriwardena, GM
Baillie, SR
Buckland, Stephen Terrence
Fewster, RM
Marchant, JH
Wilson, JD
author_sort Siriwardena, GM
title Trends in the abundance of farmland birds: a quantitative comparison of smoothed Common Birds Census indices
title_short Trends in the abundance of farmland birds: a quantitative comparison of smoothed Common Birds Census indices
title_full Trends in the abundance of farmland birds: a quantitative comparison of smoothed Common Birds Census indices
title_fullStr Trends in the abundance of farmland birds: a quantitative comparison of smoothed Common Birds Census indices
title_full_unstemmed Trends in the abundance of farmland birds: a quantitative comparison of smoothed Common Birds Census indices
title_sort trends in the abundance of farmland birds: a quantitative comparison of smoothed common birds census indices
publishDate 1998
url https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/researchoutput/trends-in-the-abundance-of-farmland-birds-a-quantitative-comparison-of-smoothed-common-birds-census-indices(f8056ec1-15af-4372-86ef-7295e161467b).html
http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0031980504&partnerID=8YFLogxK
genre Alauda arvensis
genre_facet Alauda arvensis
op_source Siriwardena , GM , Baillie , SR , Buckland , S T , Fewster , RM , Marchant , JH & Wilson , JD 1998 , ' Trends in the abundance of farmland birds: a quantitative comparison of smoothed Common Birds Census indices ' , Journal of Applied Ecology , vol. 35 , pp. 24-43 .
op_relation https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/researchoutput/trends-in-the-abundance-of-farmland-birds-a-quantitative-comparison-of-smoothed-common-birds-census-indices(f8056ec1-15af-4372-86ef-7295e161467b).html
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
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