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Modelling the winter distribution of a rare and endangered migrant, the Aquatic Warbler Acrocephalus paludicola
Authors:BRUNO A WALTHER  NORBERT SCHÄFFER  ADRIAAN VAN NIEKERK  WILFRIED THUILLER  CARSTEN RAHBEK  & STEVEN L CHOWN
Institution:Zoological Museum, and;Center for Macroecology, Institute of Biology, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 15, 2100 København Ø, Denmark;DST-NRF Centre for Invasion Biology, Department of Botany &Zoology, and;Department of Geography &Environmental Studies, University of Stellenbosch, Private Bag X1, Matieland 7602, South Africa;The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, The Lodge, Sandy, Bedfordshire SG19 2DL, UK;Climate Change Research Group, Ecology and Conservation, Kirstenbosch Research Center, National Biodiversity Institute, P/Bag X7 Claremont 7735, Cape Town, South Africa;Laboratoire d'Ecologie Alpine, UMR CNRS 5553, UniversitéJ. Fourier, BP 53, 38041 Grenoble Cedex 9, France
Abstract:The Aquatic Warbler Acrocephalus paludicola is one of the most threatened Western Palearctic passerine species, classified as globally Vulnerable. With its breeding grounds relatively secure, a clear need remains for the monitoring and protection of the migration and wintering grounds of this rare and endangered migrant. Recent research has shown that the Aquatic Warbler migrates through northwest Africa in autumn and spring. The wintering grounds are apparently limited to wetlands of sub-Saharan West Africa, with records from only about 20 localities in Mauritania, Mali, Senegal and Ghana. Given the lack of knowledge of its whereabouts, we decided to use the available data to predict the wintering distribution of the Aquatic Warbler with the help of Geographic Information Systems (GIS). We used a novel approach to model the distribution of rarely recorded species, which is based on a combination of presence-only and presence–absence modelling techniques. Using the program BIOMOD, we thus generated four progressively more conservative predictions of where the Aquatic Warbler overwinters in Africa. Whereas the most permissive model predicts the Aquatic Warbler to be found in a latitudinal band stretching from the Senegal river delta all the way to the Red Sea coast, the most restrictive model suggests a much smaller area concentrated within the regions around the Senegal river delta in northern Senegal and southern Mauritania and around the Niger inundation zone in southern Mali and eastern Burkina Faso. Such model predictions may be useful guidelines to focus further field research on the Aquatic Warbler. Given the excellent model predictions in this study, this novel technique may prove useful to model the distribution of other rare and endangered species, thus providing a means to guide future survey efforts.
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