{"title":"鹤信托的景观级长期生物研究与监测计划","authors":"","doi":"10.32873/unl.dc.zea.1332","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Our obligation is to make sure we are effectively utilizing science to meet the objectives of the Platte River Whooping Crane Maintenance Trust (1981) laid out in its charter “to rehabilitate and preserve a portion of the habitat for Whooping Cranes and other migratory birds in the Big Bend reach of the Platte River between Overton and Chapman (i.e., Central Platte River Valley), Nebraska”. The original declaration is aimed at maintaining “the physical, hydrological, and biological integrity of the Big Bend area as a life-support system for the Whooping Crane and other migratory species that utilize it.” It was clear from the institution’s founding that to accomplish this goal it was necessary to study the effectiveness of land conservation and management actions in providing habitat for Whooping Cranes and other migratory bird species. Quality habitat necessarily comprises all the components that Whooping Cranes and other migratory bird life require to complete their migrations –food and shelter– including nutrient rich diet items such as invertebrates, vascular plants, herpetofauna, fish, and small mammals as well as suitable roosting and foraging locations including wide braided rivers and undisturbed wet meadows (Allen 1952; Steenhof et al. 1988; Geluso 2013; Caven et al. 2019, 2021). Article “A” of the Crane Trust’s (1981) declaration is “to establish a written habitat monitoring plan which can be used to describe change in…[habitat] within the Big Bend of the Platte River…utilized by Sandhill Cranes and Whooping Cranes….” Following initial inventories including avian (Hay and Lingle 1982), vegetation (Kolstad 1981; Nagel 1981), small mammals (Springer 1981), herpetofauna (Jones et al. 1981), insects (Ratcliffe 1981), and fish (Cochar and Jenson 1981), a variety of excellent research has continued at the Crane Trust (https://cranetrust.org/conservation-research/publications/). However, despite the clarity of the Trust’s original declaration, long-term habitat monitoring has not progressed unabated throughout the history of the Crane Trust.","PeriodicalId":213927,"journal":{"name":"Zea Books","volume":"113 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-11-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Landscape-Level Long-Term Biological Research and Monitoring Plan for the Crane Trust\",\"authors\":\"\",\"doi\":\"10.32873/unl.dc.zea.1332\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Our obligation is to make sure we are effectively utilizing science to meet the objectives of the Platte River Whooping Crane Maintenance Trust (1981) laid out in its charter “to rehabilitate and preserve a portion of the habitat for Whooping Cranes and other migratory birds in the Big Bend reach of the Platte River between Overton and Chapman (i.e., Central Platte River Valley), Nebraska”. The original declaration is aimed at maintaining “the physical, hydrological, and biological integrity of the Big Bend area as a life-support system for the Whooping Crane and other migratory species that utilize it.” It was clear from the institution’s founding that to accomplish this goal it was necessary to study the effectiveness of land conservation and management actions in providing habitat for Whooping Cranes and other migratory bird species. Quality habitat necessarily comprises all the components that Whooping Cranes and other migratory bird life require to complete their migrations –food and shelter– including nutrient rich diet items such as invertebrates, vascular plants, herpetofauna, fish, and small mammals as well as suitable roosting and foraging locations including wide braided rivers and undisturbed wet meadows (Allen 1952; Steenhof et al. 1988; Geluso 2013; Caven et al. 2019, 2021). Article “A” of the Crane Trust’s (1981) declaration is “to establish a written habitat monitoring plan which can be used to describe change in…[habitat] within the Big Bend of the Platte River…utilized by Sandhill Cranes and Whooping Cranes….” Following initial inventories including avian (Hay and Lingle 1982), vegetation (Kolstad 1981; Nagel 1981), small mammals (Springer 1981), herpetofauna (Jones et al. 1981), insects (Ratcliffe 1981), and fish (Cochar and Jenson 1981), a variety of excellent research has continued at the Crane Trust (https://cranetrust.org/conservation-research/publications/). 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引用次数: 1
摘要
我们的义务是确保我们有效地利用科学来实现普拉特河鸣鹤维护信托基金(1981年)在其章程中提出的目标,“恢复和保护内布拉斯加州奥弗顿和查普曼之间普拉特河大弯河段(即普拉特中央河谷)部分鸣鹤和其他候鸟的栖息地”。最初的宣言旨在维护“大弯地区的物理、水文和生物完整性,作为大呼鹤和其他迁徙物种赖以生存的生命支持系统”。从该机构成立之初就很清楚,为了实现这一目标,有必要研究土地保护和管理行动在为白鹤和其他候鸟物种提供栖息地方面的有效性。高质量的栖息地必须包括白鹤和其他候鸟生命完成迁徙所需的所有组成部分——食物和住所——包括营养丰富的食物,如无脊椎动物、维管植物、爬行动物、鱼类和小型哺乳动物,以及合适的栖息和觅食地点,包括宽阔的辫状河和未受干扰的湿草地(Allen 1952;Steenhof et al. 1988;Geluso 2013;Caven et al. 2019, 2021)。鹤信托基金(1981年)宣言的第A条是“建立一个书面的栖息地监测计划,可以用来描述普拉特河大弯内…[栖息地]的变化…沙丘鹤和呼鸣鹤使用....”最初的清单包括鸟类(Hay and Lingle 1982)、植被(Kolstad 1981;Nagel 1981),小型哺乳动物(Springer 1981),爬行动物(Jones et al. 1981),昆虫(Ratcliffe 1981)和鱼类(Cochar and Jenson 1981), Crane Trust (https://cranetrust.org/conservation-research/publications/)继续进行各种优秀的研究。然而,尽管信托基金最初的声明很明确,但在整个鹤信托基金的历史上,长期栖息地监测并没有取得进展。
Landscape-Level Long-Term Biological Research and Monitoring Plan for the Crane Trust
Our obligation is to make sure we are effectively utilizing science to meet the objectives of the Platte River Whooping Crane Maintenance Trust (1981) laid out in its charter “to rehabilitate and preserve a portion of the habitat for Whooping Cranes and other migratory birds in the Big Bend reach of the Platte River between Overton and Chapman (i.e., Central Platte River Valley), Nebraska”. The original declaration is aimed at maintaining “the physical, hydrological, and biological integrity of the Big Bend area as a life-support system for the Whooping Crane and other migratory species that utilize it.” It was clear from the institution’s founding that to accomplish this goal it was necessary to study the effectiveness of land conservation and management actions in providing habitat for Whooping Cranes and other migratory bird species. Quality habitat necessarily comprises all the components that Whooping Cranes and other migratory bird life require to complete their migrations –food and shelter– including nutrient rich diet items such as invertebrates, vascular plants, herpetofauna, fish, and small mammals as well as suitable roosting and foraging locations including wide braided rivers and undisturbed wet meadows (Allen 1952; Steenhof et al. 1988; Geluso 2013; Caven et al. 2019, 2021). Article “A” of the Crane Trust’s (1981) declaration is “to establish a written habitat monitoring plan which can be used to describe change in…[habitat] within the Big Bend of the Platte River…utilized by Sandhill Cranes and Whooping Cranes….” Following initial inventories including avian (Hay and Lingle 1982), vegetation (Kolstad 1981; Nagel 1981), small mammals (Springer 1981), herpetofauna (Jones et al. 1981), insects (Ratcliffe 1981), and fish (Cochar and Jenson 1981), a variety of excellent research has continued at the Crane Trust (https://cranetrust.org/conservation-research/publications/). However, despite the clarity of the Trust’s original declaration, long-term habitat monitoring has not progressed unabated throughout the history of the Crane Trust.