1 / 12

Seabird Monitoring in the California Current System

Seabird Monitoring in the California Current System. U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service U.S. Geological Survey. Regional Seabird Conservation Plan Objectives Review seabird resources, threats, and management issues Identify priorities for management, monitoring, research and outreach

edythe
Download Presentation

Seabird Monitoring in the California Current System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Seabird Monitoring in the California Current System U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service U.S. Geological Survey

  2. Regional Seabird Conservation Plan Objectives Review seabird resources, threats, and management issues Identify priorities for management, monitoring, research and outreach Develop a comprehensive strategy to direct future FWS actions

  3. Seabird Monitoring Program for the California Current System • Monitoring at a variety of scales, using a hierarchical approach • Scientifically rigorous, and logistically and fiscally feasible • Cooperatively with other federal, state, and private partners USFWS is working with USGS and seabird experts throughout the Pacific to develop a monitoring program for seabirds breeding in the California Current System. NWR State Oceanographic sub-region California Current System

  4. Geographic Scope California Current System: coastal and marine habitats from Scott Islands, British Columbia, Canada to Punta Eugenia, Baja California Sur, Mexico Initial effort is focused on the U.S. portion of the CCS.

  5. Seabird Monitoring Workshops • Experts in seabird monitoring convened for two workshops Oregon - September 2004 Southern California - April 2005 • Participants from Canada, Alaska, Washington, Oregon, and California • Experts from USGS, USFWS, State Agencies, University, and private sector

  6. Objectives of Seabird Monitoring Workshops • Develop specific objectives for seabird monitoring in the CCS • Outline the underlying design or framework for a seabird monitoring program • Select focal species for monitoring • For each of these species recommend: monitoring locations, population parameters, measurement variables, and field methodologies.

  7. Goals for Seabird Monitoring • GOAL 1 Detect and understand changes in the status and trends of seabird populations in support of conservation strategies in the CCS. • GOAL 2 Integrate seabird monitoring into an overall assessment of the health of the marine/coastal ecosystem in the CCS.

  8. Goals for Seabird Monitoring GOAL 1: Detect and understand changes in the status and trends of seabird populations in support of conservation strategies in the CCS. OBJECTIVES • Monitor trends of seabird populations. • Determine conservation status of seabird populations, incorporating abundance, distribution, trends, and threats to seabird populations. • Gain insight as to causes of population change. • Collaborate with partners to achieve and advance all objectives.

  9. Goals for Seabird Monitoring GOAL 2: Integrate seabird monitoring into an overall assessment of the health of the marine/coastal ecosystem in the CCS. OBJECTIVES • Use seabirds as indicators of CCS health (i.e. structure, function, and productivity). • Collaborate with partners to integrate seabird monitoring with other marine monitoring efforts.

  10. Considerations for Species Selection • Birds of Conservation Concern • Stewardship species – those species and subspecies for which the CCS supports the majority of the global population • Representation from each foraging guild • Species with broad distribution across the oceanographic sub-regions of the CCS • Species that can provide data to address the Goals and Objectives TARGET SPECIES Leach's Storm-Petrel Ashy Storm-Petrel Pelagic Cormorant Brandt's Cormorant Western Gull Glaucous-winged Gull Elegant Tern Black Skimmer Common Murre Xantus's Murrelet Cassin's Auklet Rhinoceros Auklet

  11. Basic Framework of the Monitoring Program Two tiered approach • Inventory of all colonies at infrequent intervals (e.g., every 10-15 years) • More intensive monitoring of population parameters of target species at selected colonies

  12. 2005 Draft manual developed: Species specific recommendations for monitoring, monitoring locations, population parameters, measurement variables, and field methodologies. Spring 2006 Review by team of experts Summer 2006 Peer review Fall 2006 Final Manual Schedule

More Related