Piping plover habitat and demography following storm-induced and engineered landscape change

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Date
2020-04-16
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Virginia Tech
Abstract

Understanding the effects of large-scale disturbances and associated management actions on imperiled species can increase conservation value of future management. Piping plovers (Charadrius melodus) are federally threatened and endangered, disturbance-dependent shorebirds, nesting on broad, sparsely vegetated beaches, sandbars, and lakeshores. In October 2012, Hurricane Sandy storm surges cleared vegetation and opened old and new inlets through Fire Island and Westhampton Island, New York, creating plover habitat. Storm effects prompted an island-wide stabilization project, and certain sections of Fire Island were designed to create and/or improve plover habitat (hereafter, restoration areas) to mitigate possible habitat loss or degradation. Many plover populations range-wide appear to be habitat-limited, and we anticipated positive population growth following habitat creation.

To help predict what might happen to the plover population following Hurricane Sandy, we evaluated the effects of habitat-creating events at several other locations in the range, evaluating the hypothesis that plover population sizes are habitat limited. We estimated the amount of habitat available before and after four significant storm and flooding events by classifying pre- and post-disturbance aerial imagery and evaluated the population changes that occurred after disturbance-related habitat alterations. Following these habitat creating events, nesting habitat increased 27%–950%, and, subsequently, these plover populations increased overall 72%–622% (increase of 8–217 pairs in 3 to 8 years after the disturbance, average 12–116% increase annually). The demographic changes likely were driven by some combination of productivity and immigration occurring simultaneously with regional increases.

We then evaluated population and suitable habitat change on Fire Island and Westhampton Island following Hurricane Sandy. We developed an integrated population model to determine the primary contributors to population and assessed the effect of restoration areas on demographic processes during 2013–2018. We also recorded individual locations of adults and pre-fledge chicks to evaluate effects of post-Hurricane Sandy landscape features on resource selection of adults and chicks, and behavior and survival of plover broods. We evaluated whether breeding stage (pre-breeding, nesting, brooding, post-breeding), simple breeding stage (breeding, not-breeding), or instantaneous behavior class (parental, non-parental) best explained habitat selection during the 5-month plover breeding season. We also evaluated the effects of post-Hurricane Sandy landscape features on resource selection, behavior, and survival of plover broods during 2013–2019.

We observed positive population growth in three of five years and overall growth through the study (λ ̅=1.12). Immigration and reproductive output were correlated with population growth (r = 0.93 and 0.74, respectively). Compared to the rest of the study area, restoration areas had higher chick survival but lower nest survival and breeding fidelity, and population growth (λ ̅=1.09) in restoration areas was similar. For adult plovers, behavior class best explained habitat selection. Compared to non-parental plovers, plovers engaged in parental behavior (incubating, brooding, and accompanying chicks, hereafter 'parental') selected areas closer to bay intertidal habitats and with more dry sand. Non-parental plovers avoided areas with more dry sand and did not select for or against bay intertidal habitats. Additionally, non-parental plovers avoided development more than parental plovers and avoided areas of lower elevation more than parental plovers. In each year, there was more suitable habitat for parental plovers than non-parental plovers. Plover broods selected for flatter sites with less vegetation but selected for sites closer to development as time since Hurricane Sandy increased. Chick foraging rates were highest in moist substrates and were negatively influenced by nesting plover density. Chick survival was negatively influenced by nesting plover density and was greater for earlier hatched broods. Further, chick survival was higher following an outbreak of sarcoptic mange in the local red fox (Vulpes vulpes) population. If human interventions were reduced or modified in such a way as to create, maintain, and improve habitat, plover populations likely would reach higher numbers, and the potential for achieving recovery goals would be increased. Future restoration areas projects could use Great Gun as a model, although design criteria could be improved to increase access to moist, flat, low energy foraging sites. Efforts to increase immigration of novel breeding adults into the system, primarily by habitat creation or maintenance, are likely to have the greatest local effect on population growth but may not improve regional population persistence if habitat creation is only local. Management to improve reproductive output is likely to have a positive effect on population growth if there is suitable habitat to support recruits and will improve regional population persistence by producing emigrants. When improving or creating plover habitat, managers should consider habitat needs both for plovers of all life stages. Habitat management should focus on maintaining vegetation-free sand and access to low-elevation foraging habitat. Allowing hurricanes such as Hurricane Sandy to alter the landscape naturally will create these landscape features.

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Keywords
behavior, Charadrius melodus, habitat creation, habitat selection, Hurricane Sandy, population dynamics, survival
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