Marsh birds as ecological performance indicators for Lake Ontario outflow regulation
- Langue de publication
- Anglais
- Date
- 2023-04
- Type
- Manuscrit accepté
- Auteur(s)
- Denomme-Brown, Simon T.
- Fiorino, Giuseppe E.
- Gehring, Thomas M.
- Lawrence, Gregory J.
- Tozer, Douglas C.
- Grabas, Greg P.
- Éditeur
- Elsevier
Résumé
Water-level regulation can have significant impacts on coastal wetland ecosystems. In this study we sought to update marsh-bird-based ecological performance indicators (PIs) that support adaptive management of long-term outflow regulation for Lake Ontario. Previous PIs established in the mid-2000 s were based on single species and monitoring them required data not currently being collected at broad scales. We therefore focused on developing and validating community-level PIs using data from an ongoing, long-term, basin-wide monitoring program, the Coastal Wetland Monitoring Program (CWMP). After identifying species with documented responses to variation in water levels in the literature, we considered a suite of potential PIs by first examining correlations with both annual mean water levels and measures of interannual water-level fluctuations. We then used a mixed-modelling framework to determine which highly correlated PIs exhibited statistically significant relationships with water-level variables. Having established significant effects of water levels on the candidate PIs, we performed a power-sensitivity analysis to determine the degree of change in each PI that can be detected based on current CWMP sampling. From these analyses, we propose six potential marsh-bird based PIs: sum total abundance of sensitive marsh-obligate species, richness of sensitive marsh-obligate species, and abundance of each of red-winged blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus), marsh wren (Cistothorus palustris), common gallinule (Gallinula galeata), and least bittern (Ixobrychus exilis). Of these, the community-based PIs of sum total abundance and richness of sensitive species appear most suitable for assessing the marsh-bird community response to outflow regulation on Lake Ontario.
Sujet
- Diversité biologique,
- Nature et environnement,
- Eau,
- Sciences et technologie
Droits
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
Pagination
39 pages
Évalué par les pairs
Yes
Niveau de libre accès
Green
Identifiants
- ISSN
-
2773-0719
- 0380-1330
Article
- Titre de la revue
- Journal of Great Lakes Research
- Volume de la revue
- 49
- Numéro de revue
- 2
- Date d'acceptation
- 2023-02-02
- Date de soumission
- 2022-07-29
Relation
- Est remplacé par :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jglr.2023.02.001