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Provision of artificial shelter on beaches is associated with improved shorebird fledging success

journal contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by G Maguire, A Duivenvoorden, Mike WestonMike Weston, Robyn Adams
Artificial chick shelters might improve productivity of beach-nesting birds threatened by anthropogenic disturbance. We investigated the efficacy of three different chick shelter designs against four criteria: accessibility to chicks over time, thermal insulation, conspicuousness to beach-goers, and practicality (cost and ease of transport). One design (‘A-frame’) was selected because it offered the greatest thermal insulation, was the least conspicuous, most cost effective, and performed equally well in terms of accessibility. We deployed these artificial shelters on Hooded Plover Thinornis rubricollis territories where broods were present (n 5 11), and compared the behaviour and survival rate of chicks to that at control sites (n 5 10). We were unable to discern any difference in the behaviour of broods when artificial shelters were available. However, the survival rate of chicks to fledging was 71.8% higher where an artificial shelter was provided (n 5 21 broods). This was validated by analysing data from a larger sample of broods monitored as part of an active volunteer-based management programme; shelters conferred a 42.8%increase in survival to fledging (n 5 81 broods). Thus, artificial shelters have the potential to increase survival rates of threatened shorebird chicks, though the mechanisms through which survival is increased require further investigation.

History

Journal

Bird conservation international

Volume

21

Issue

2

Pagination

172 - 185

Publisher

Cambridge Univeristy Press

Location

Cambridge, England

ISSN

0959-2709

Language

eng

Notes

Published online 11 August 2010

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, Cambridge University Press