Evaluation of harvest and information needs for North American sea ducks

Autor: Anthony J. Roberts, Chris Dwyer, Paul I. Padding, Kathleen K. Fleming, Michael C. Runge, Fred A. Johnson, Guthrie S. Zimmerman, Patrick K. Devers, Mark D. Koneff
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2017
Předmět:
0106 biological sciences
Male
Population Dynamics
Waterfowl
lcsh:Medicine
Breeding
01 natural sciences
Population density
Poultry
lcsh:Science
education.field_of_study
Multidisciplinary
biology
Geography
Population size
Uncertainty
Research Personnel
Eider
010601 ecology
Density dependence
Ducks
Fecundity
Vertebrates
Physical Sciences
Female
Seasons
Monte Carlo Method
Algorithms
Research Article
Canada
Conservation of Natural Resources
Oceans and Seas
Population
Wildlife
010603 evolutionary biology
Scoter
Birds
Population Metrics
Animals
Humans
Adults
education
Expert Testimony
Ecosystem
Demography
Population Density
Population Biology
lcsh:R
Organisms
Biology and Life Sciences
biology.organism_classification
Probability Theory
Probability Distribution
United States
Fishery
Fertility
Fowl
Age Groups
Amniotes
People and Places
Population Groupings
lcsh:Q
Mathematics
Zdroj: PLoS ONE, Vol 12, Iss 4, p e0175411 (2017)
PLoS ONE
ISSN: 1932-6203
Popis: Wildlife managers routinely seek to establish sustainable limits of sport harvest or other regulated forms of take while confronted with considerable uncertainty. A growing body of ecological research focuses on methods to describe and account for uncertainty in management decision-making and to prioritize research and monitoring investments to reduce the most influential uncertainties. We used simulation methods incorporating measures of demographic uncertainty to evaluate risk of overharvest and prioritize information needs for North American sea ducks (Tribe Mergini). Sea ducks are popular game birds in North America, yet they are poorly monitored and their population dynamics are poorly understood relative to other North American waterfowl. There have been few attempts to assess the sustainability of harvest of North American sea ducks, and no formal harvest strategy exists in the U.S. or Canada to guide management. The popularity of sea duck hunting, extended hunting opportunity for some populations (i.e., special seasons and/or bag limits), and population declines have led to concern about potential overharvest. We used Monte Carlo simulation to contrast estimates of allowable harvest and observed harvest and assess risk of overharvest for 7 populations of North American sea ducks: the American subspecies of common eider (Somateria mollissima dresseri), eastern and western populations of black scoter (Melanitta americana) and surf scoter (M. perspicillata), and continental populations of white-winged scoter (M. fusca) and long-tailed duck (Clangula hyemalis). We combined information from empirical studies and the opinions of experts through formal elicitation to create probability distributions reflecting uncertainty in the individual demographic parameters used in this assessment. Estimates of maximum growth (rmax), and therefore of allowable harvest, were highly uncertain for all populations. Long-tailed duck and American common eider appeared to be at high risk of overharvest (i.e., observed harvest < allowable harvest in 5–7% and 19–26% of simulations, respectively depending on the functional form of density dependence), whereas the other populations appeared to be at moderate risk to low risk (observed harvest < allowable harvest in 22–68% of simulations, again conditional on the form of density dependence). We also evaluated the sensitivity of the difference between allowable and observed harvest estimates to uncertainty in individual demographic parameters to prioritize information needs. We found that uncertainty in overall fecundity had more influence on comparisons of allowable and observed harvest than adult survival or observed harvest for all species except long-tailed duck. Although adult survival was characterized by less uncertainty than individual components of fecundity, it was identified as a high priority information need given the sensitivity of growth rate and allowable harvest to this parameter. Uncertainty about population size was influential in the comparison of observed and allowable harvest for 5 of the 6 populations where it factored into the assessment. While this assessment highlights a high degree of uncertainty in allowable harvest, it provides a framework for integration of improved data from future research and monitoring. It could also serve as the basis for harvest strategy development as management objectives and regulatory alternatives are specified by the management community.
Databáze: OpenAIRE