| Literature DB >> 23840328 |
Scott Wilson1, Eric M Anderson, Amy S G Wilson, Douglas F Bertram, Peter Arcese.
Abstract
Marine waterbirds have shown variable trends in abundance over the past four decades with some species displaying steep declines along the Pacific coast from British Columbia through California. One of the most dramatic changes has been that of western grebes (Aechmophorus occidentalis) in the Salish Sea. This region was a former core of the species wintering distribution but they have become increasingly rare prompting calls for conservation action. A more thorough understanding of this situation requires the analysis of trends at broader geographic scales as well as a consideration of mechanisms that might have led to a change in abundance. We used hierarchical modeling with a Bayesian framework applied to 36 years of Audubon Christmas Bird Count data to assess continent-wide and regional population trends in western and Clark's grebes (A. clarkii) from 1975 to 2010. Our results show that the North American wintering population of Aechmophorus grebes decreased by ∼52% after 1975, but also that western grebes displayed strongly opposing regional patterns. Abundance decreased by about 95% over 36 years in the Salish Sea but increased by over 300% along coastal California. As a result, the mean centre of the species distribution shifted south by an estimated 895 km between 1980 and 2010. Mechanisms underlying this shift require further study but we hypothesize that it may be related to a change in the abundance and availability of their forage fish prey base. Since the mid-1980s, the Pacific sardine stock off the California coast increased from a few thousand metric tonnes to over two million. At the same time both the abundance and availability of Pacific herring declined in the Salish Sea. Studies are needed to examine this hypothesis further and additional consideration should be directed at other changes in the marine environment that may have contributed to a range shift.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23840328 PMCID: PMC3686804 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0065408
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Distribution of non-breeding Aechmophorus grebes in 1980 and 2010.
Each circle refers to an Audubon Christmas Bird Count used in the analysis and the size of the circle is scaled to the effort adjusted abundance of grebes on the count in that year. Combined data on western (Aechmophorus occidentalis) and Clark’s grebes (A. clarkii) were used in the figure but over 90% of observations are for western grebes in all regions except the southwestern states (see text for further detail).
Location and number of CBC count circles and Aechmophorus spp. abundance in eight wintering regions.
| Region | Description | CBC circles | Proportion WEGR | Mean count |
| Alaska/North BC | Coastal regions of southeast Alaska and British Columbia north of 51° latitude | 7 | 100 | 97 |
| Salish Sea | Strait of Georgia, Puget Sound, Strait of Juan de Fuca and Vancouver Island | 34 | 99.99 | 934 |
| Outer Washington/Oregon Coast | Coastal counts along Washington and Oregon coasts | 9 | 99.60 | 132 |
| Northern California Coast | Coastal counts in California north of 36° latitude | 26 | 93.05 | 660 |
| Southern California Coast | Coastal counts in California south of 36° latitude including Baja California | 25 | 96.54 | 661 |
| Northern Interior | Interior counts in British Columbia, Washington and Oregon | 25 | 99.35 | 11 |
| Interior California/Nevada | Interior counts in California and Nevada | 24 | 90.87 | 481 |
| Southwestern Interior | Arizona, New Mexico, Texas and interior counts in Mexico | 13 | 47.44 | 63 |
Coastal and interior circles are those <50 km or ≥50 km from the coast, respectively (see Methods). Mean count per circle is averaged across all 36 years and does not account for trend. Proportion WEGR refers to the percentage of all observations to species that were identified as western grebes (Aechmophorus occidentalis) since the split of western and Clark’s grebes in 1985.
The Salish Sea includes the inland network of waterways in southern British Columbia and northern Washington and includes the Strait of Georgia, Strait of Juan de Fuca, and Puget Sound.
Figure 2Population change of Aechmophorus grebes for the Salish Sea, southern California coast, interior California/Nevada and the continental population from 1975–2010.
Population index is the predicted mean count per circle in each region controlled for survey effort. Light gray lines represent the 95% credible intervals on the mean count. Regions not shown here displayed no significant change with the exception of the southwestern states. Western grebes comprised >99% of the Aechmophorus spp. observations in the Salish Sea and 91–97% in the other two regions.