An impact evaluation of conservation investments targeting long‐distance migratory species

Author:

Donlan C. Josh12ORCID,Eusse‐González Diana3ORCID,Luque Gloria M.1,Reiter Matthew E.4,Ruiz‐Gutierrez Viviana2ORCID,Allen Michael C.5ORCID,Johnston‐González Richard3,Robinson Orin J.2ORCID,Fernández Guillermo6ORCID,Palacios Eduardo7ORCID,Valenzuela Jorge8

Affiliation:

1. Advanced Conservation Strategies Midway Utah USA

2. Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology Ithaca New York USA

3. Asociación para el Estudio y Conservación de las Aves Acuáticas en Colombia (Calidris) Cali Colombia

4. Point Blue Conservation Science Petaluma California USA

5. Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Natural Resources Rutgers University New Brunswick New Jersey USA

6. Unidad Académica Mazatlán, Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México Mazatlán México

7. Centro de Investigación Científica y de Educación Superior de Ensenada – Unidad La Paz La Paz México

8. Centro de Estudio y Conservación del Patrimonio Natural (CECPAN) Ancud Chile

Abstract

AbstractWe evaluated the impact of a philanthropic program investing in the conservation of sites along the Pacific Americas Flyway, which spans >16,000 km of coastline and is used by millions of shorebirds. Using a quasi‐experimental, mixed methods approach, we estimated what would have happened to shorebird populations at 17 wintering sites without the sustained and additional investment they received. We modeled shorebird populations across the entire flyway and at sites with and without investment. Combining shorebird abundance estimates with a land‐cover classification model, we used the synthetic control method to create counterfactuals for shorebird trends at the treatment sites. We found no evidence of an overall effect across three outcome variables. Species‐ and site‐level treatment effects were heterogeneous, with a few cases showing evidence of a positive effect, including a site with a high level of overall investment. Results suggest six shorebirds declined across the entire flyway, including at many Latin American sites. However, the percentage of flyway populations present at the sites remained stable, and the percentage at the treatment sites was higher (i.e., investment sites) than at control sites. Multiple mechanisms behind our results are possible, including that investments have yet to mitigate impacts and negative impacts at other sites are driving declines at the treatment sites. A limitation of our evaluation is the sole focus on shorebird abundance and the lack of data that prohibits the inclusion of other outcome variables. Monitoring infrastructure is now in place to design a more robust and a priori shorebird evaluation framework across the entire flyway. With this framework, it will prove easier to prioritize limited dollars to result in the most positive conservation outcomes.

Funder

David and Lucile Packard Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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