Traditional salt-pans hold major concentrations of overwintering shorebirds in Southeast Asia

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Author listSripanomyom S., Round P.D., Savini T., Trisurat Y., Gale G.A.

PublisherElsevier

Publication year2011

JournalBiological Conservation (0006-3207)

Volume number144

Issue number1

Start page526

End page537

Number of pages12

ISSN0006-3207

eISSN1873-2917

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-78751590942&doi=10.1016%2fj.biocon.2010.10.008&partnerID=40&md5=e3430ca036874771a78d3a7c27198312

LanguagesEnglish-Great Britain (EN-GB)


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Abstract

Shorebirds are declining worldwide due to loss and degradation of critical breeding and wintering habitats. Some human-modified habitats, particularly salt-pans which are used by shorebirds in many regions of the world, may help substitute for natural habitats lost for a wide range of species during migration. We studied the influence of landscape characteristics on species richness, abundance, and diversity of shorebirds at 20 sites covering most of the Inner Gulf of Thailand, a landscape with a long history of salt farming. Sites with salt-pans present held significantly higher species richness, abundance and diversity of shorebirds. Areas with larger proportions given over to aquaculture tended to have lower species richness, abundance and diversity. Generalized additive models indicated that landscapes with a larger proportion of tidal flats in conjunction with salt-pans were the best predictors of sites with higher species richness, abundance and diversity. Landscape configurations with higher richness, abundance and diversity of shorebirds also tended to be less fragmented and contained slightly larger patches. Shorebirds appeared to use ponds with exposed mud in salt-pans as both roosting sites and supplementary feeding grounds during high tide. Traditional salt-pans therefore proved to contribute significantly to maintenance of overwintering shorebird populations in this landscape and should be investigated elsewhere in Asian coastal zones. Collaboration between researchers, salt farmers and planning authorities as to how best to maintain salt-pans as potential shorebird roost sites such as in the Inner Gulf of Thailand is urgently needed in order to maintain habitat for shorebird populations in critical wintering and staging areas of this flyway. ฉ 2010 Elsevier Ltd.


Keywords

Landscape characteristicsMigratory shorebirdsThe Inner Gulf of ThailandTraditional salt-pans


Last updated on 2023-29-09 at 07:35