1. Survey effort and targeted landbird community metrics at Indiana lowland forest restoration sites.
- Author
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West, Benjamin M., Wildhaber, Mark L., Green, Nicholas S., Isanhart, John P., McDonald, M. Victoria, and Hooper, Michael J.
- Subjects
ECOLOGICAL surveys ,RESTORATION ecology ,ENVIRONMENTAL chemistry ,FOREST restoration ,WILDLIFE conservation - Abstract
Many sampling and analytical methods can estimate the abundance, distributions, and diversity of birds and other wildlife. However, challenges with sample size and analytical capacity can make these methods difficult to implement for resource‐limited monitoring programs. To apprise efficient and attainable sampling designs for landbird monitoring programs with limited observational data, we used breeding season bird point survey data collected in 2016 at four forest restoration sites in Indiana, USA. We evaluated three subsets of observed species richness, total possibly breeding landbirds, Partners in Flight Regional Conservation Concern (PIF RCC) landbirds, and interior forest specialists (IFSs). Simulated surveys based on field data were used to conduct Bayesian Michaelis–Menten curve analyses estimating observed species as a function of sampling effort. On comparing simulated survey sets with multiple habitat types versus those with one habitat, we found that those with multiple habitat types had estimated 39%–83% greater observed PIF RCC species richness and required 41%–55% fewer visits per point to observe an equivalent proportion of PIF RCC species. Even with multiple habitats in a survey set, the number of visits per point required to detect 50% of observable species was 30% higher for PIF RCC species than for total breeding landbird species. Low detection rates of IFS species at two field sites made precise estimation of required effort to observe these species difficult. However, qualitatively, we found that only sites containing mature forest fragments had detections of several bird species designated as high‐confidence IFS species. Our results suggest that deriving specialized species diversity metrics from point survey data can add value when interpreting those data. Additionally, designing studies to collect these metrics may require explicitly planning to visit multiple habitat types at a monitoring site and increasing the number of visits per survey point. Integr Environ Assess Manag 2024;20:1954–1968. © 2024 The Author(s). Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society of Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry (SETAC). This article has been contributed to by U.S. Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA. Key Points: Four forest restoration sites in Indiana supported a variety of potentially breeding migratory bird species, including interior forest specialists and regional conservation concern species.At forest restoration sites in Indiana with various habitat types, it was necessary to visit both open and woody plant‐dominated habitats to efficiently detect bird species of regional conservation concern.When analyzing bird point survey data, deriving specialized species diversity metrics, such as richness of habitat specialist species or conservation concern species, can add value when interpreting those data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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