Dynamic vegetation cover and decline in common eider breeding numbers in Nova Scotia, Canada

Author:

Tomlik Molly D.1,Milton G. Randy123,Parsons Glen J.2,Mallory Mark L.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biology, Acadia University, 33 Westwood Avenue, Wolfville, NS B4P 2R6, Canada

2. Nova Scotia Department of Natural Resources and Renewables, 136 Exhibition Street, Kentville, NS B4N 4E5, Canada

3. Gulbali Institute, Charles Sturt University, PO Box 789, Albury, New South Wales 2640, Australia

Abstract

The American common eider ( Somateria mollissima dresseri) is a colonially nesting sea duck breeding on islands in the coastal regions of Atlantic Canada. Declines in colony size have been pronounced in some parts of its range, notably in Nova Scotia, and may be attributable to a variety of interconnected factors including changes in habitat conditions. Using surveys collected two decades apart, we compared nesting habitat types, availability, and use by breeding eiders on 16 islands that supported >1600 eider nests in 1992–1993, but 830 nests in 2013. While general patterns of eider nesting habitat use remained consistent (e.g., nesting preferences exhibited for Low Shrubland and Grassland habitats, and avoidance of forest or beach habitats), overall vegetation cover declined, but relative habitat changes were inconsistent across islands. Three of the islands with the greatest change in vegetation had cormorant ( Phalacrocorax spp.) colonies in 2013 that were not there in the earlier years. We suggest that changes in vegetation, in some cases facilitated by cormorant colony formation, influenced susceptibility of nesting females to predators, and these interconnected factors may be contributing to local population declines.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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