Changes in habitat suitability for wintering dabbling ducks during dry conditions in the Central Valley of California

Published Article

California

Publication date: January 15, 2023

File format: url

View resource

Research in California’s Central Valley reveals how drought and reduced surface water availability diminish habitat suitability for wintering dabbling ducks. Wetlands remain relatively stable, while rice and other agricultural fields show major declines, highlighting the importance of dynamic conservation and water management during dry years.

Subject Tags

  • Wetlands
  • Agriculture
  • Wildlife

Abstract

In arid and Mediterranean regions, landscape-scale wetland conservation requires understanding how wildlife responds to dynamic freshwater availability and conservation actions to enhance wetland habitat. Taking advantage of Landsat satellite data and structured and community science bird survey data, we built species distribution models to describe how three duck species, the Northern Pintail (Anas acuta), Green-winged Teal (Anas crecca), and Northern Shoveler (Anas clypeata), respond to freshwater supply and food resources on different flooded land cover types in the Central Valley of California. Specifically, our models compared duck habitat suitability between the wettest and driest conditions in each month from September through April. Using abundance-weighted boosted regression trees, we created three sets of species occurrence models based on different covariates: (1) near real-time (hereafter “real-time”) covariates in which duck observations were matched to the water availability within the 16-day window of a Landsat observation, (2) a combination of real-time covariates and waterfowl food resource covariates describing annual corn and rice biomass and managed wetland moist soil seed yield estimates derived from Landsat data, and (3) long-term average covariates—the most common approach to species distribution modeling—in which long-term average surface water availability was used. We modeled the monthly occurrence of three duck species as a function of surface water availability, land cover type, road density, temperature, and bird data source. We found that dry conditions result in reduced habitat suitability, with the biggest reductions in November through January and in agricultural fields; in contrast, suitability of flooded wetland habitat was relatively robust to surface water availability. When models of habitat suitability based on long-term average climate conditions were compared to models based on real-time conditions, the highest long-term suitability values occurred in areas where suitability was high regardless of whether it was a wet or a dry year. While all models performed well, the inclusion of crop and wetland plant yield covariates resulted in slightly higher model performance. Overall, species distribution models created using data on the environmental conditions present at the time of bird observations can aid conservation efforts under extreme conditions over large spatial scales.

Citation

Conlisk, E. E., Byrd, K. B., Matchett, E., Lorenz, A. A., Casazza, M., Golet, G. H., ... & Reiter, M. E. (2023). Changes in habitat suitability for wintering dabbling ducks during dry conditions in the Central Valley of California. Ecosphere, 14(1), e4367.

https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.4367

TNC Authors

  • Greg Golet
    Senior Scientist, Water Program
    The Nature Conservancy
    Email: ggolet@TNC.ORG

  • Mark Reynolds
    Director of the Point Conception Institute
    The Nature Conservancy
    Email: mreynolds@TNC.ORG