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Changes in habitat suitability for three declining Anatidae species saltmarshes on the Mersey estuary, North-West England

Baggini, Cecilia LU (2020) In Master Thesis in Geographical Information Science GISM01 20202
Dept of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science
Abstract
Saltmarshes are areas of coastal grassland that are regularly flooded by seawater. They support a large number of resident and migratory bird species, both overwintering and breeding. The Mersey Estuary Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) is situated in North West England and it supports nationally significant numbers of overwintering wildfowl and waders. Decline of three overwintering bird species’ populations (pintail, teal and wigeon) were more marked than national trends, so changes in local factors were believed to play a part. The aim of this study was to determine whether habitat suitability for the three target species changed between 2002 and 2012 in saltmarshes on the Mersey estuary.

One habitat suitability model per... (More)
Saltmarshes are areas of coastal grassland that are regularly flooded by seawater. They support a large number of resident and migratory bird species, both overwintering and breeding. The Mersey Estuary Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) is situated in North West England and it supports nationally significant numbers of overwintering wildfowl and waders. Decline of three overwintering bird species’ populations (pintail, teal and wigeon) were more marked than national trends, so changes in local factors were believed to play a part. The aim of this study was to determine whether habitat suitability for the three target species changed between 2002 and 2012 in saltmarshes on the Mersey estuary.

One habitat suitability model per species was built using a variety of source data (elevation, vegetation and macroinvertebrate surveys, aerial photography, questionnaires) and expert judgment to evaluate the relative importance of factors. Models uncertainty was estimated using “bounding maps” representing the most extreme plausible scenarios for each factor contributing more than 10% to the total value of the habitat suitability index.

Saltmarsh area decreased between 2002 and 2012 in the Mersey Estuary, reducing available habitat for all three target species. Vast areas of pioneer zone disappeared during the study period, especially affecting species like pintail, which preferentially feed on pioneer zone species. Evidence suggested that although recreational disturbance is likely to be an issue in parts of the study area, its intensity did not change notably during the study period. Wildfowling, however, significantly affected the suitability of the study site for all species. The western part of the site had no shooting disturbance in 2002 but by 2012 a clay-pigeon shooting club had opened nearby. Although this activity does not cause direct damage to birds, the shooting noise is likely to make birds avoid the area. In addition, wigeon was also negatively affected by the increased abundance of an invasive bird species in the eastern part of the study site.

The observed decline in pintail, teal and wigeon numbers overwintering in the Mersey estuary could only partly be explained by habitat changes. While suitable habitat for pintail drastically decreased and could fully explain this species’ decline, the decrease in suitable area for teal and wigeon was not as marked as the decline in bird numbers. For these two species other factors may be involved, such as habitat improvements in nearby estuaries or changes in land use in the area functionally linked to the Mersey saltmarshes. The possible management measures identified by this project include altering the Mersey estuary dredging regime to reverse saltmarsh erosion and addressing the lack of a wildfowling sanctuary area in the study site. (Less)
Popular Abstract
Saltmarshes are areas of coastal grassland that are regularly flooded by seawater. They support many bird species, which spend their winters there or breed in the summer. The Mersey Estuary Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI), in the North West of England, supports overwintering bird populations of national importance. Numbers of three of these species (pintail, teal and wigeon) have been decreasing in the Mersey estuary more than we would expect looking at how the population is doing at the national level. Thus, local factors are likely to play a part. This study tried to see if habitat suitability for these species changed between 2002 and 2012 in saltmarshes on the Mersey estuary.

One habitat suitability model per species was... (More)
Saltmarshes are areas of coastal grassland that are regularly flooded by seawater. They support many bird species, which spend their winters there or breed in the summer. The Mersey Estuary Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI), in the North West of England, supports overwintering bird populations of national importance. Numbers of three of these species (pintail, teal and wigeon) have been decreasing in the Mersey estuary more than we would expect looking at how the population is doing at the national level. Thus, local factors are likely to play a part. This study tried to see if habitat suitability for these species changed between 2002 and 2012 in saltmarshes on the Mersey estuary.

One habitat suitability model per species was built using many different datasets (elevation, vegetation and macroinvertebrate surveys, aerial photography, questionnaires) and expert judgment to select which factors were important and what their relative importance was. Models uncertainty was estimated looking at the variability between habitat suitability values obtained according to different modeller’s decisions.

Saltmarsh area decreased between 2002 and 2012 in the Mersey Estuary, reducing available habitat for all three bird species. The pioneer zone was especially affected by erosion and pintail, which prefers feeding on pioneer zone plants, suffered negative effects. Although recreational disturbance is likely to be an issue in parts of the study area, its intensity did not change between 2002 and 2012. Wildfowling, however, made the site less suitable for all species. There was no shooting in the western part of the site in 2002, but by 2012 a clay-pigeon shooting club had opened nearby. This activity does not cause direct damage to birds, but the shooting noise is likely to disturb them. In addition, wigeon was also negatively affected by increased numbers of Canada goose, an invasive bird species, in the eastern part of the study site.

The decrease in numbers of pintail, teal and wigeon in the Mersey estuary could only partly be explained by habitat changes. Suitable habitat for pintail drastically decreased and could fully explain this species’ decline, but the pattern was not as clear for the other two species. Other factors may be involved, such as more habitat available in nearby estuaries or changes in land use in the surrounding area. Changing dredging in the estuary and making sure birds have an area free of wildfowling are the two main measures the site managers could implement. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Baggini, Cecilia LU
supervisor
organization
course
GISM01 20202
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Geography, GIS, habitat suitability model, saltmarsh, protected areas
publication/series
Master Thesis in Geographical Information Science
report number
120
language
English
id
9031701
date added to LUP
2020-11-09 10:22:55
date last changed
2020-11-09 19:40:22
@misc{9031701,
  abstract     = {{Saltmarshes are areas of coastal grassland that are regularly flooded by seawater. They support a large number of resident and migratory bird species, both overwintering and breeding. The Mersey Estuary Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) is situated in North West England and it supports nationally significant numbers of overwintering wildfowl and waders. Decline of three overwintering bird species’ populations (pintail, teal and wigeon) were more marked than national trends, so changes in local factors were believed to play a part. The aim of this study was to determine whether habitat suitability for the three target species changed between 2002 and 2012 in saltmarshes on the Mersey estuary.

One habitat suitability model per species was built using a variety of source data (elevation, vegetation and macroinvertebrate surveys, aerial photography, questionnaires) and expert judgment to evaluate the relative importance of factors. Models uncertainty was estimated using “bounding maps” representing the most extreme plausible scenarios for each factor contributing more than 10% to the total value of the habitat suitability index. 

Saltmarsh area decreased between 2002 and 2012 in the Mersey Estuary, reducing available habitat for all three target species. Vast areas of pioneer zone disappeared during the study period, especially affecting species like pintail, which preferentially feed on pioneer zone species. Evidence suggested that although recreational disturbance is likely to be an issue in parts of the study area, its intensity did not change notably during the study period. Wildfowling, however, significantly affected the suitability of the study site for all species. The western part of the site had no shooting disturbance in 2002 but by 2012 a clay-pigeon shooting club had opened nearby. Although this activity does not cause direct damage to birds, the shooting noise is likely to make birds avoid the area. In addition, wigeon was also negatively affected by the increased abundance of an invasive bird species in the eastern part of the study site.

The observed decline in pintail, teal and wigeon numbers overwintering in the Mersey estuary could only partly be explained by habitat changes. While suitable habitat for pintail drastically decreased and could fully explain this species’ decline, the decrease in suitable area for teal and wigeon was not as marked as the decline in bird numbers. For these two species other factors may be involved, such as habitat improvements in nearby estuaries or changes in land use in the area functionally linked to the Mersey saltmarshes. The possible management measures identified by this project include altering the Mersey estuary dredging regime to reverse saltmarsh erosion and addressing the lack of a wildfowling sanctuary area in the study site.}},
  author       = {{Baggini, Cecilia}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  series       = {{Master Thesis in Geographical Information Science}},
  title        = {{Changes in habitat suitability for three declining Anatidae species saltmarshes on the Mersey estuary, North-West England}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}