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Using satellite tracking to assess the use of protected areas and alternative roosts by Whooper and Bewick's Swans

Using satellite tracking to assess the use of protected areas and alternative roosts by Whooper and Bewick's Swans
Using satellite tracking to assess the use of protected areas and alternative roosts by Whooper and Bewick's Swans
Protected areas are one of the major tools used in the conservation of biodiversity, but animals are unlikely always to remain within these human-made boundaries. Understanding when and why species choose to leave protected areas can help us to improve the effectiveness of these management tools. Here, we investigate the use of protected and non-protected areas by two migratory species undergoing rapid wintering population changes in northwest Europe: Whooper Swans Cygnus cygnus and Bewick's Swans Cygnus columbianus bewickii. Global positioning system tags were fitted to 15 Whooper Swans in winter 2008/09 and to 18 Bewick's Swans from winter 2013/14 to 2014/15 at the Ouse Washes Special Protection Area (an internationally important roost for wintering waterbirds) and on adjacent fields in southeast England. Here, swans feed on farmland during the day but return to designated reserves to roost at night, where they receive protection from predators and disturbance within managed roost habitats. When swans roost elsewhere at alternative sites, they may face more adverse conditions, and so understanding the extent and causes of the use of alternative roosts is important for swan conservation efforts. The alternative roosting proportion, defined as the proportion of nights spent outside protected reserves, was 0.237 for Bewick's Swans and challenging to quantify accurately for Whooper Swans. A generalized additive mixed model to model repeated measurements on individuals showed that the proportion of time that Bewick's Swans spent at alternative roosts correlated positively with river level and negatively with temperature. Competition and foraging flight distances are thought to drive these relationships, as swans seek access both to roost space and to nearby feeding habitats. Our findings improve our understanding of the environmental conditions under which migratory waterbirds may choose to roost outside protected areas.
Biologging, Conservation, Protected Areas, Swans, Tracking, Waterfowl, waterfowl, protected areas, behaviour, tracking, swans
0019-1019
Wilson, Joshua C.
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Wood, Kevin A.
9b23af3a-4b22-459a-9fb8-a80ea690be01
Griffin, Larry R.
e4f3b2c5-0f6f-4167-9442-b3fe3ebbad22
Brides, Kane
3e090025-05b8-4335-8999-f4481dc39482
Rees, Eileen C.
262a1221-4f83-4144-8b3e-1d21c11f850c
Ezard, Thomas H.G.
a143a893-07d0-4673-a2dd-cea2cd7e1374
Wilson, Joshua C.
4cbd466e-6650-4e20-af55-700c9ff7935d
Wood, Kevin A.
9b23af3a-4b22-459a-9fb8-a80ea690be01
Griffin, Larry R.
e4f3b2c5-0f6f-4167-9442-b3fe3ebbad22
Brides, Kane
3e090025-05b8-4335-8999-f4481dc39482
Rees, Eileen C.
262a1221-4f83-4144-8b3e-1d21c11f850c
Ezard, Thomas H.G.
a143a893-07d0-4673-a2dd-cea2cd7e1374

Wilson, Joshua C., Wood, Kevin A., Griffin, Larry R., Brides, Kane, Rees, Eileen C. and Ezard, Thomas H.G. (2024) Using satellite tracking to assess the use of protected areas and alternative roosts by Whooper and Bewick's Swans. Ibis. (doi:10.1111/ibi.13369).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Protected areas are one of the major tools used in the conservation of biodiversity, but animals are unlikely always to remain within these human-made boundaries. Understanding when and why species choose to leave protected areas can help us to improve the effectiveness of these management tools. Here, we investigate the use of protected and non-protected areas by two migratory species undergoing rapid wintering population changes in northwest Europe: Whooper Swans Cygnus cygnus and Bewick's Swans Cygnus columbianus bewickii. Global positioning system tags were fitted to 15 Whooper Swans in winter 2008/09 and to 18 Bewick's Swans from winter 2013/14 to 2014/15 at the Ouse Washes Special Protection Area (an internationally important roost for wintering waterbirds) and on adjacent fields in southeast England. Here, swans feed on farmland during the day but return to designated reserves to roost at night, where they receive protection from predators and disturbance within managed roost habitats. When swans roost elsewhere at alternative sites, they may face more adverse conditions, and so understanding the extent and causes of the use of alternative roosts is important for swan conservation efforts. The alternative roosting proportion, defined as the proportion of nights spent outside protected reserves, was 0.237 for Bewick's Swans and challenging to quantify accurately for Whooper Swans. A generalized additive mixed model to model repeated measurements on individuals showed that the proportion of time that Bewick's Swans spent at alternative roosts correlated positively with river level and negatively with temperature. Competition and foraging flight distances are thought to drive these relationships, as swans seek access both to roost space and to nearby feeding habitats. Our findings improve our understanding of the environmental conditions under which migratory waterbirds may choose to roost outside protected areas.

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Ibis - 2024 - Wilson - Using satellite tracking to assess the use of protected areas and alternative roosts by Whooper and - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 9 October 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 October 2024
Published date: 28 October 2024
Keywords: Biologging, Conservation, Protected Areas, Swans, Tracking, Waterfowl, waterfowl, protected areas, behaviour, tracking, swans

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496038
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496038
ISSN: 0019-1019
PURE UUID: 5a5df0e2-28a7-4260-85ce-204534e16577
ORCID for Joshua C. Wilson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0009-0004-2472-5521
ORCID for Thomas H.G. Ezard: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8305-6605

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 02 Dec 2024 17:34
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:08

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Contributors

Author: Joshua C. Wilson ORCID iD
Author: Kevin A. Wood
Author: Larry R. Griffin
Author: Kane Brides
Author: Eileen C. Rees
Author: Thomas H.G. Ezard ORCID iD

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