Increases in the Number of American Black Ducks Wintering in Nova Scotia, 1970–2015

Author:

Robertson Gregory J.1,Tomlik Molly2,Milton G. Randy3,Parsons Glen J.3,Mallory Mark L.2

Affiliation:

1. G.J. Robertson Wildlife Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, 6 Bruce Street, Mount Pearl, Newfoundland and Labrador, A1N 4T3, Canada

2. M. Tomlik, M.L. Mallory Department of Biology, Acadia University, Nova Scotia, B4P 2R6, CanadaPresent address of M. Tomlik: Canadian Wildlife Service, Environment and Climate Change Canada, 17 Waterfowl Lane, Sackville, New Brunswick, E4L 1G6, Canada

3. G.R. Milton, G.J. Parsons Nova Scotia Department of Natural Resources, 136 Exhibition Street, Kentville, Nova Scotia, B4N 4E5, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Despite extensive conservation and management efforts, American black duck (Anas rubripes) populations remain below desired population levels. Researchers have noted declines at a number of wintering areas, but indications are that wintering populations in the northern part of the range are increasing. Intermittently between 1970 and 1989, and annually since 1992, wildlife biologists have flown aerial surveys of the entire coast of Nova Scotia, Canada, to count wintering waterfowl. This survey counted the total number of ducks seen in predefined lengths of coastline. We analyzed those survey data using generalized linear mixed models, over the entire time period (1970–2015) and in the recent time period (1992–2015, when surveys were done every year), across five general regions of Nova Scotia. We fit models using Bayesian methods with uninformative priors; models with negative binomial response distributions performed well. Due to the large variation in mean numbers of black ducks across the predefined lengths of coastline, we treated these blocks of coastline as a fixed effect, while annual trend (slope) was modeled as a random effect to account for variation in annual trend across blocks of coastline. Results were similar between the entire time series (1970–2015) or the most recent and more complete time series (1992–2015). In general, numbers of wintering black ducks in Nova Scotia increased (1.0–16.0%/y) and increases were significant (Bayesian credible intervals did not bound 0) in four of five regions. Increasing numbers in Nova Scotia are consistent with other observations of increasing wintering numbers at the northern range of American black ducks and may indicate a shift in the wintering range that has been ongoing for decades. Future habitat management actions will benefit from consideration of regional trends and the distributional change of black duck.

Publisher

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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