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Coastal urbanization and the integrity of estuarine waterbird communities: Threshold responses and the importance of scale

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dc.contributor.author DeLuca, William V. en
dc.contributor.author Studds, Colin E. en
dc.contributor.author King, Ryan S. en
dc.contributor.author Marra, Peter P. en
dc.date.accessioned 2009-07-24T13:19:04Z
dc.date.available 2009-07-24T13:19:04Z
dc.date.issued 2008
dc.identifier.citation DeLuca, William V., Studds, Colin E., King, Ryan S., and Marra, Peter P. 2008. "<a href="https://repository.si.edu/handle/10088/7787">Coastal urbanization and the integrity of estuarine waterbird communities: Threshold responses and the importance of scale</a>." <em>Biological Conservation</em>. 141 (11):2669&ndash;2678. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2008.07.023">https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2008.07.023</a> en
dc.identifier.issn 0006-3207
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10088/7787
dc.description.abstract Estuarine ecosystems are becoming increasingly altered by the concentration of human populations near the coastline, however a robust indicator of this change is lacking. We developed an index of waterbird community integrity (IWCI) and tested its sensitivity to anthropogenic activities within 28 watersheds and associated subestuaries of Chesapeake Bay, USA. The IWCI was used as a tool to gain insight into how human land use affects estuarine ecosystem integrity. Based on Akaike&#39;s information criteria (AIC), a single variable model including percent developed land in estuarine watersheds was thirteen (2002) and twenty-six (2003) times more likely than models including percent agriculture and forest cover to fit the IWCI data. Consequently, we examined how suburban, urban, and total development shaped IWCI scores at three spatial scales: (1) watershed; (2) inverse-distance-weighted (IDW) watershed (land cover near the coastline weighted proportionally greater than that farther away); (3) local (land cover within 500?m of the coastline). Suburban, urban, and total development were all significant predictors of IWCI scores. Relationships were stronger at the IDW and local scales than at the whole watershed scale. Nonparametric changepoint analysis revealed a &gt;80% probability of a threshold in IWCI scores when as little as 3.7% (2002) and 3.5% (2003) of the IDW land cover within the watershed was urban. Our results indicate that, of the landscape stressors we examined, development near estuarine coastlines is the primary stressor to estuarine waterbird community integrity, and that estuarine ecosystem integrity may be impaired by even extremely low levels of coastal urbanization. en
dc.format.extent 439653 bytes
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.relation.ispartof Biological Conservation en
dc.title Coastal urbanization and the integrity of estuarine waterbird communities: Threshold responses and the importance of scale en
dc.type Journal Article en
dc.identifier.srbnumber 76641
dc.identifier.doi 10.1016/j.biocon.2008.07.023
rft.jtitle Biological Conservation
rft.volume 141
rft.issue 11
rft.spage 2669
rft.epage 2678
dc.description.SIUnit SERC en
dc.description.SIUnit crc en
dc.description.SIUnit NZP en
dc.citation.spage 2669
dc.citation.epage 2678


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