Assigning harvested waterfowl to geographic origin using feather δ2H isoscapes: What is the best analytical approach?

Author:

Kusack Jackson W.ORCID,Tozer Douglas C.,Harvey Kayla M.,Schummer Michael L.,Hobson Keith A.

Abstract

Establishing links between breeding, stopover, and wintering sites for migratory species is important for their effective conservation and management. Isotopic assignment methods used to create these connections rely on the use of predictable, established relationships between the isotopic composition of environmental hydrogen and that of the non-exchangeable hydrogen in animal tissues, often in the form of a calibration equation relating feather (δ2Hf) values derived from known-origin individuals and amount-weighted long-term precipitation (δ2Hp) data. The efficacy of assigning waterfowl to moult origin using stable isotopes depends on the accuracy of these relationships and their statistical uncertainty. Most current calibrations for terrestrial species in North America are done using amount-weighted mean growing-seasonδ2Hpvalues, but the calibration relationship is less clear for aquatic and semi-aquatic species. Our objective was to critically evaluate current methods used to calibrateδ2Hpisoscapes to predictedδ2Hfvalues for waterfowl. Specifically, we evaluated the strength of the relationships betweenδ2Hpvalues from three commonly used isoscapes and known-originδ2Hfvalues three published datasets and one collected as part of this study, also grouping these data into foraging guilds (dabbling vs diving ducks). We then evaluated the performance of assignments using these calibrations by applying a cross-validation procedure. It remains unclear if any of the testedδ2Hpisoscapes better predict surface water inputs into food webs for foraging waterfowl. We found only marginal differences in the performance of the tested known-origin datasets, where the combined foraging-guild-specific datasets showed lower assignment precision and model fit compared to data for individual species. We recommend the use of the more conservative combined foraging-guild-specific datasets to assign geographic origin for all dabbling duck species. Refining these relationships is important for improved waterfowl management and contributes to a better understanding of the limitations of assignment methods when using the isotope approach.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Province of Ontario

Western University

Birds Canada

Delta Waterfowl

Ducks Unlimited

SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry

Long Island Wildfowl Heritage Group

Camp Fire Conservation Fund

Waterfowl Research Foundation

Environment and Climate Change Canada

SC Johnson

Bluff’s Hunting Club

Black Duck Joint Venture

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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