Affiliation:
1. Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)
2. Wageningen University & Research, Aquaculture and Fisheries Group
3. In Memorian
Abstract
Abstract
Salt marshes pose challenges for the birds that inhabit them, including high rates of nest flooding, tipping, and predation. The impacts of rising sea levels and invasive species further exacerbate these challenges. To assess the urgency of conservation and adequacy of new actions, researchers and wildlife managers may use population viability analyses (PVAs) to identify population trends and major threats. We conducted PVA for Formicivora acutirostris, which is a threatened neotropical bird species endemic to salt marshes. We studied the species’ demography in different sectors of an estuary in southern Brazil from 2006–2023 and estimated the sex ratio, longevity, productivity, first-year survival, and mortality rates. For a 133-year period, starting in 1990, we modeled four scenarios: 1) pessimistic and 2) optimistic scenarios, including the worst and best values for the parameters; 3) a baseline scenario, with intermediate values; and 4) scenarios under conservation management, with increased recruitment and/or habitat preservation. Projections indicated population decline for all assessment scenarios, with a 100% probability of extinction within 34 years in the pessimistic scenario and no extinction in the optimistic scenario. The conservation scenarios indicated population stability with 16% improvement in productivity, 10% improvement in first-year survival, and stable carrying capacity. The disjunct distribution of the species, with remnants concentrated in a broad interface with arboreal habitats, may seal the population decline by increasing nest predation. The species should be considered conservation dependent, and we recommend assisted colonization, predator control, habitat recovery, and ex situ conservation.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
Reference59 articles.
1. Koppen’s climate classification map for Brazil;Alvares CA;Meteorol Z,2014
2. On the use of demographic models of population viability in endangered species management;Beissinger SR;J Wildl Manag,1998
3. Plasticity in nesting adaptations of a tidal marsh endemic bird;Benvenuti B;Ecol Evol,2018
4. Bornschein MR (2013) Biologia da conservação do bicudinho-do-brejo Stymphalornis acutirostris (Aves, Thamnophilidae). Doctoral Dissertation, Universidade Federal do Paraná
5. Longevity records and signs of aging in Marsh Antwren Formicivora acutirostris (Thamnophilidae);Bornschein MR;Wilson J Ornithol,2015