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Relationship of current management practices to movements of Piping Plover broods in an Atlantic Coast population
Authors:Chelsea E Weithman  James D Fraser  Sarah M Karpanty  Daniel H Catlin
Institution:Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia, 24061 USA
Abstract:Mobility of precocial chicks facilitates self-feeding and escape from predators, but also allows chicks to move into potentially dangerous areas. At Cape Hatteras National Seashore and Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge, North Carolina, precocial Piping Plovers (Charadrius melodus) are managed with vehicle and pedestrian exclusion buffers to reduce potential anthropogenic disturbance and mortality. From 2015 to 2018, we monitored 23 broods from hatching until fledging age (25 days), and recorded brood locations, chick behavior, and potentially disruptive predators, people, or vehicles. We estimated straight-line hourly movement rates relative to brood habitat selection, behavior, and potential disturbance stimuli, daily movement distances, and 95% minimum convex polygon home range areas of broods through the pre-fledging period. Daily brood movements urn:x-wiley:02738570:media:jofo12333:jofo12333-math-0001, range = 0–327.3 m/d) varied by age and year. Hourly movements also varied urn:x-wiley:02738570:media:jofo12333:jofo12333-math-0002, range = 0.04–1450.9 m/h), but were not well described by the factors we tested. Daily and hourly movements were generally shorter than current management buffer sizes, broods were always observed within protective buffers, and were rarely disturbed by human activity or possible predators. Home range sizes of broods (urn:x-wiley:02738570:media:jofo12333:jofo12333-math-0003 increased as broods aged. Our results show that movements by plover broods can be variable and relatively unpredictable across temporal and spatial scales, but the low rate of brood disturbance suggests effective management of anthropogenic disturbance. We recommend that under current conditions, regular monitoring by managers should continue to ensure that the size and location of implemented buffers track actual brood use without exposing broods to risks from human beach users.
Keywords:behavior  Charadrius melodus  conservation  disturbance  habitat selection  precocial  shorebird
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