AI Article Synopsis

  • Many bird species that breed on ocean beaches face conservation challenges due to their dependence on invertebrates for food, particularly in areas affected by human recreation.
  • An experiment in Victoria, Australia showed that foot traffic leads to significant declines in invertebrate abundance and species diversity, especially impacting rare species integral to the diet of birds like the threatened Hooded Plover.
  • The findings suggest that trampling is a serious threat to these birds, indicating a need for conservation strategies that involve managing and improving food resources in their breeding habitats.

Article Abstract

Many species of birds breeding on ocean beaches and in coastal dunes are of global conservation concern. Most of these species rely on invertebrates (e.g. insects, small crustaceans) as an irreplaceable food source, foraging primarily around the strandline on the upper beach near the dunes. Sandy beaches are also prime sites for human recreation, which impacts these food resources via negative trampling effects. We quantified acute trampling impacts on assemblages of upper shore invertebrates in a controlled experiment over a range of foot traffic intensities (up to 56 steps per square metre) on a temperate beach in Victoria, Australia. Trampling significantly altered assemblage structure (species composition and density) and was correlated with significant declines in invertebrate abundance and species richness. Trampling effects were strongest for rare species. In heavily trafficked plots the abundance of sand hoppers (Amphipoda), a principal prey item of threatened Hooded Plovers breeding on this beach, was halved. In contrast to the consistently strong effects of trampling, natural habitat attributes (e.g. sediment grain size, compactness) were much less influential predictors. If acute suppression of invertebrates caused by trampling, as demonstrated here, is more widespread on beaches it may constitute a significant threat to endangered vertebrates reliant on these invertebrates. This calls for a re-thinking of conservation actions by considering active management of food resources, possibly through enhancement of wrack or direct augmentation of prey items to breeding territories.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5001726PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0161905PLOS

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