4.6 Article

Effects of stewardship on protected area effectiveness for coastal birds

Journal

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 5, Pages 1484-1495

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13698

Keywords

accountable conservation; coastal birds; community science; Gulf of Mexico; population trends; protected areas; á reas protegidas; aves costeras; ciencia comunitaria; conservació n responsable; Golfo de Mé xico; tendencias poblacionales; 有 效 保 护 保 护 区 种 群 动 态 社 区 科 学 沿 海 鸟 类 墨 西 哥 湾

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The evaluation of protected areas for bird conservation revealed that active stewardship greatly contributed to the positive trends of vulnerable waterbird populations, demonstrating the importance of reducing anthropogenic disturbance to ensure the conservation of coastal birds.
Evaluation of protected area effectiveness is critical for conservation of biodiversity. Protected areas that prioritize biodiversity conservation are, optimally, located and managed in ways that support relatively large and stable or increasing wildlife populations. Yet evaluating conservation efficacy remains a challenging endeavor. We used an extensive community science data set, eBird, to evaluate the efficacy of protected areas for birds across the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic coasts of the United States. We modeled trends (2007-2018) for 12 vulnerable waterbirds that use coastal areas during breeding or wintering. We compared two types of protected areas-sites where conservation organizations implemented active stewardship or management or both to reduce human disturbance (hereafter stewardship sites) and local, state, federal, and private protected areas managed to maintain natural land cover (hereafter protected areas)-as well as unprotected areas. We evaluated differences in trends between stewardship, protected, and unprotected areas across the Gulf and Atlantic coasts as a whole. Similar to a background sample, stewardship was known to occur at stewardship sites, but unknown at protected and unprotected areas. Four of 12 target species-Black Skimmer (Rynchops niger), Brown Pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis), Least Tern (Sternula antillarum), and Piping Plover (Charadrius melodus)-had more positive trends (two to 34 times greater) at stewardship sites than protected areas. Furthermore, five target species showed more positive trends at sites with stewardship programs than unprotected sites during at least one season, whereas seven species showed more positive trends at protected than unprotected areas. No species had more negative trends at stewardship sites than unprotected areas, and two species had more negative trends at protected than unprotected areas. Anthropogenic disturbance is a serious threat to coastal birds, and our findings demonstrate that stewardship to reduce its negative impacts helps ensure conservation of vulnerable waterbirds.

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