The importance of high streamflow and bank erosion for the Bank Swallow, a sentinel species of alluvial river systems

IF 7 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Gregory H. Golet , Kristen E. Dybala , Joseph G. Silveira , Adam Henderson , Jennifer Isola , David H. Wright , Ron Melcer Jr , Danika Tsao
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Abstract

Lowland alluvial rivers are rich in biodiversity, yet many are highly degraded, constrained by dams and riprap, and no longer support robust natural communities or critical ecosystem services. Restorative actions are needed, as are ecological indicators for evaluating their effectiveness. We evaluated factors that regulate the population growth rate of Bank Swallows to inform strategies for its recovery and to assess its value as an indicator of riparian ecosystem health. In North America, over the past 50 years, this species, which depends upon erosion for its cutbank breeding habitat, has declined at a rate considered extreme. Understanding the causes of this decline and identifying feasible recovery actions is an urgent conservation priority. In our 25-year study of the Bank Swallow population on the Sacramento River, the breeding population fluctuated widely but declined at an average overall rate of 1.5 % per year. Periodic high streamflow played an important role in maintaining the population, and its effect on the population growth rate was time-lagged by 1 year. This suggests that high flow conditions may have improved rates of Bank Swallow reproductive success and/or survival, leading to increased recruitment into the breeding population in the subsequent year. We also found evidence for density-dependent population growth, suggesting that when the breeding population was large, high-quality nesting habitat was limiting. Our study establishes the critical importance of high streamflow and bank erosion to maintaining Bank Swallow breeding populations. In so doing, it informs recovery strategies for the species and the rivers it inhabits and identifies the Bank Swallow as an appropriate indicator of alluvial river ecosystem processes.
高流量和河岸侵蚀对河岸燕子的重要性,河岸燕子是冲积河流系统的哨兵物种
低地冲积河流具有丰富的生物多样性,但许多河流严重退化,受到水坝和抛石的限制,不再支持强大的自然群落或关键的生态系统服务。需要采取恢复性行动,也需要利用生态指标评价其有效性。我们评估了影响银燕子种群增长率的因素,为其恢复策略提供信息,并评估其作为河岸生态系统健康指标的价值。在北美,在过去的50年里,这种依赖侵蚀作为其河岸繁殖栖息地的物种,以被认为是极端的速度减少。了解这种下降的原因并确定可行的恢复行动是保护的当务之急。在我们对萨克拉门托河上的银燕种群的25年研究中,繁殖种群波动很大,但以每年1.5%的平均总体速度下降。周期性高流量对种群的维持有重要作用,其对种群增长率的影响滞后1年。这表明,高流量条件可能提高了银燕的繁殖成功率和/或存活率,导致在随后的一年增加繁殖种群的招募。我们还发现了密度依赖种群增长的证据,表明当繁殖种群较大时,高质量的筑巢栖息地是有限的。我们的研究确定了高流量和河岸侵蚀对维持滩燕繁殖种群的至关重要性。在此过程中,它为该物种及其居住的河流的恢复战略提供了信息,并将“河岸燕子”确定为冲积河流生态系统过程的适当指标。
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来源期刊
Ecological Indicators
Ecological Indicators 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
11.80
自引率
8.70%
发文量
1163
审稿时长
78 days
期刊介绍: The ultimate aim of Ecological Indicators is to integrate the monitoring and assessment of ecological and environmental indicators with management practices. The journal provides a forum for the discussion of the applied scientific development and review of traditional indicator approaches as well as for theoretical, modelling and quantitative applications such as index development. Research into the following areas will be published. • All aspects of ecological and environmental indicators and indices. • New indicators, and new approaches and methods for indicator development, testing and use. • Development and modelling of indices, e.g. application of indicator suites across multiple scales and resources. • Analysis and research of resource, system- and scale-specific indicators. • Methods for integration of social and other valuation metrics for the production of scientifically rigorous and politically-relevant assessments using indicator-based monitoring and assessment programs. • How research indicators can be transformed into direct application for management purposes. • Broader assessment objectives and methods, e.g. biodiversity, biological integrity, and sustainability, through the use of indicators. • Resource-specific indicators such as landscape, agroecosystems, forests, wetlands, etc.
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