4.5 Article

Oil Infrastructure has Greater Impact than Noise on Stress and Habitat Selection in Three Grassland Songbirds

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 71, Issue 2, Pages 393-404

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00267-022-01752-2

Keywords

Energy development; Anthropogenic noise; Habitat quality; Stress; Grassland birds; Conservation

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Oil extraction may affect wildlife by changing habitat suitability and impacting stress levels and behavior, but distinguishing the effects of infrastructure from associated noise and human activity is challenging. This study investigated the impacts of oil development on the demographic distribution and corticosterone levels of three grassland passerine species in southern Alberta, Canada. Surprisingly, higher-quality female Chestnut-collared Longspurs tended to nest closer to oil wells, while higher-quality Savannah Sparrows generally avoided nesting sites impacted by oil wells. Corticosterone levels varied with the presence of oil development, but the response was specific to species and stimuli. The study suggests that both physical infrastructure and anthropogenic noise should be mitigated to conserve the grassland songbird community.
Oil extraction may impact wildlife by altering habitat suitability and affecting stress levels and behavior of individuals, but it can be challenging to disentangle the impacts of infrastructure itself on wildlife from associated noise and human activity at well sites. We evaluated whether the demographic distribution and corticosterone levels of three grassland passerine species (Chestnut-collared Longspur, Calcarius ornatus; Baird's Sparrow, Centronyx bairdii; and Savannah Sparrow Passerculus sandwichensis) were impacted by oil development in southern Alberta, Canada. We used a landscape-scale oil well noise-playback experiment to evaluate whether impacts of wells were caused by noise. Surprisingly, higher-quality female Chestnut-collared Longspurs tended to nest closer to oil wells, while higher-quality Savannah Sparrows generally avoided nesting sites impacted by oil wells. Corticosterone levels in all species varied with the presence of oil development (oil wells, noise, or roads), but the magnitude and direction of the response was species and stimulus specific. While we detected numerous impacts of physical infrastructure on stress physiology and spatial demographic patterns, few of these resulted from noise. However, all three species in this study responded to at least one disturbance associated with oil development, so to conserve the grassland songbird community, both the presence of physical infrastructure and anthropogenic noise should be mitigated.

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