Evaluating conservation units using network analysis : a sea duck case study

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1002/fee.2648

Language of the publication
English
Date
2024-01-09
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Lamb, Juliet S.
  • Cooper-Mullin, Clara
  • Gilliland, Scott G.
  • Berlin, Alicia M.
  • Bowman, Timothy D.
  • Boyd, W. Sean
  • De La Cruz, Susan E. W.
  • Esler, Daniel
  • Evenson, Joseph R.
  • Flint, Paul
  • Lepage, Christine
  • Meattey, Dustin E.
  • Osenkowski, Jason E.
  • Paton, Peter W. C.
  • Perry, Matthew C.
  • Rosenberg, Dan
  • Savard, Jean-Pierre L.
  • Savoy, Lucas
  • Schamber, Jason
  • Ward, David H.
  • Takekawa, John Y.
  • McWilliams, Scott R.
Publisher
Ecological Society of America

Abstract

Conserving migratory wildlife requires understanding how groups of individuals interact across seasons and landscapes. Telemetry reveals individual movements at large spatiotemporal scales; however, using movement data to define conservation units requires scaling up from individual movements to species- and community-level patterns. We developed a framework to define flyways and identify important sites from telemetry data and applied it to long-term, range-wide tracking data from three species (640 individuals) of sea ducks: namely, North American scoters (Melanitta spp). Our network of 88 nodes included both multispecies hotspots and areas uniquely important to individual species. We found limited spatial overlap between scoters wintering on the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of North America, with differing connectivity patterns between coasts. Finally, we identified four multispecies conservation units that did not correspond to traditional management flyways. From this approach, we show how individual movements can be used to quantify range-wide connectivity of migratory species and reveal gaps in conservation strategies.

Subject

  • Nature and environment,
  • Science and technology

Rights

Pagination

7 pages

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Green

Identifiers

ISSN
1540-9309
1540-9295

Article

Journal title
Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
Journal volume
22
Journal issue
3

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Collection(s)

Biodiversity

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