4.2 Article

Declining adult survival of New Zealand Bar-tailed Godwits during 2005-2012 despite apparent population stability

Journal

EMU-AUSTRAL ORNITHOLOGY
Volume 116, Issue 2, Pages 147-157

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS AUSTRALIA
DOI: 10.1071/MU15058

Keywords

East Asian-Australasian Flyway; Limosa lapponica baueri; mark-recapture; shorebirds

Categories

Funding

  1. New Zealand Department of Conservation Research and Development [3739-01, 3599]
  2. Pukorokoro Miranda Naturalists Trust
  3. Massey University
  4. British Ornithological Union
  5. ALW Open Program
  6. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO)
  7. NWO Rubicon grant
  8. BirdLife Netherlands
  9. WWF-Netherlands
  10. NWO TOP-grant [NWO-854.11.004]
  11. FRST Postdoctoral Fellowship
  12. Marsden Fund
  13. David and Lucile Packard Foundation through the Pacific Shorebird Migration Project

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Like many migratory shorebird populations using the East Asian-Australasian Flyway, Bar-tailed Godwits Limosa lapponica baueri in New Zealand have significantly declined since the mid-1990s, but census data indicate a relatively stable population since 2004. The demographic drivers of both the decline and stabilisation remain unknown. We estimated annual survival from mark-recapture data of adult godwits in New Zealand during 2005-2014. Annual adult survival declined over the study period from 0.89-0.96 in 2005-2010 to 0.83-0.84 in 2011-2012. The simultaneous decline in annual survival found in a separate study of Bar-tailed Godwits L. l. menzbieri in north-west Australia suggests a common effect of their high dependence on threatened migratory staging sites in the Yellow Sea; the more extreme decline in L. l. menzbieri may reflect ecological differences between the populations, such as timing and extent of use of these sites. At current apparent recruitment rates, persistent adult survival of similar to 0.84 would lead to a population decline of 5-6% per year in L. l. baueri. Our study implies that the demographic precursors to a population decline developed during a period of apparent population stability; this suggests that monitoring a single index of population stability is insufficient for predicting future trends.

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