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Burton, N.H.K. 2007 Landscape approaches to studying the effects of disturbance on waterbirds. Ibis 149 (Suppl.1): 95-101. Abstract The internationally important populations of waterbirds
that winter in the United Kingdom can face intense pressure from human
disturbance as a result of the high urbanization found around many protected
coastal or inland wetland sites. Here, I describe and evaluate an approach
that has been used to investigate the spatial effects of human disturbance
on waterbirds. Rather than directly investigating behavioural responses
to individual disturbance events, the presence of features in the landscape
associated with disturbance is instead used as a surrogate, with the
essential aim being to demonstrate that bird numbers or densities are
depressed or their behaviour altered in proximity to areas used by humans.
This paper first describes case studies that demonstrate the limitations
of the basic inference (i.e. that disturbance influences patterns of
waterbird distribution or behaviour) and then how investigations might
be strengthened. For conclusions to be sound, it is particularly important
that other factors, such as food supply, that might also explain the
spatial patterns observed are considered or other corroborative evidence
presented. The approach is thus least applicable in the most heterogeneous
environments where many factors, perhaps spatially autocorrelated, may
explain variation in distribution or behaviour. However, greatest confidence
in the validity of conclusions may be gained where studies are able
to show (ideally by experimental manipulation) that species’ distributions
or behaviour vary temporally in line with the levels of human use of
the features examined. Although its aim and scope are thus limited,
the use of a landscape approach, provided that it takes into account
other factors affecting spatial variation in bird abundance or behaviour,
can provide a preliminary assessment of species avoidance of key sources
of disturbance that may offer a framework for more detailed investigation. |
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