Abstract

Predicting and mitigating impacts of climate change and development within the boreal biome requires a sound understanding of factors influencing the abundance, distribution, and population dynamics of species inhabiting this vast biome. Unfortunately, the limited accessibility of the boreal biome has resulted in sparse and spatially biased sampling, and thus our understanding of boreal bird population dynamics is limited. To implement effective conservation of boreal birds, a cost-effective approach to sampling the boreal biome will be needed. Our objective was to devise a sampling scheme for monitoring boreal birds that would improve our ability to model species-habitat relationships and monitor changes in population size and distribution. A statistically rigorous design to achieve these objectives would have to be spatially balanced and hierarchically structured with respect to ecozones, ecoregions and political jurisdictions. Therefore, we developed a multi-stage hierarchically structured sampling design known as the Boreal Optimal Sampling Strategy (BOSS) that included cost constraints, habitat stratification, and optimization to provide a cost-effective alternative to other common monitoring designs. Our design provided similar habitat and spatial representation to habitat stratification and equal-probability spatially balanced designs, respectively. Not only was our design able to achieve the desired habitat representation and spatial balance necessary to meet our objectives, it was also significantly less expensive (1.3-2.6 times less) than the alternative designs we considered. To further balance trade-offs between cost and representativeness prior to field implementation, we ran multiple iterations of the BOSS design and selected the one which minimized predicted costs while maximizing a multi-criteria evaluation of representativeness. Field implementation of the design in three vastly different regions over three field seasons showed that the approach can be implemented in a wide variety of logistical scenarios and ecological conditions. We provide worked examples and scripts to allow our approach to be implemented or adapted elsewhere. We also provide recommendations for possible future refinements to our approach, but recommend that our design now be implemented to provide unbiased information to assess the status of boreal birds and inform conservation and management actions.

Highlights

  • Tackling ongoing [1,2,3] and projected [4,5] global biodiversity losses will require difficult decisions about resource allocation and the need to consider where, when, and how to focus conservation efforts

  • Sample size allocation to geographic strata under the Boreal Optimal Sampling Strategy (BOSS) design resulted in a similar sample size on average as allocating samples based on stratum area, because data are centered along a 1:1 correspondence line (Fig 4)

  • 103 Primary Sampling Unit (PSU) would be allocated to the Abitibi Plains ecoregion of Ontario under sampling proportional to stratum area, but 173 PSUs were allocated to the same stratum under the BOSS design owing to higher than average dispersion (i.e., 20.1 vs. average of 1.04)

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Summary

Introduction

Tackling ongoing [1,2,3] and projected [4,5] global biodiversity losses will require difficult decisions about resource allocation and the need to consider where, when, and how to focus conservation efforts. Species conservation is often most successful and least expensive when implemented early, before species require dedicated recovery efforts [6]. Identification of species declines should improve the likelihood of successful conservation. Developing effective conservation strategies requires identification of the locations and factors contributing to species’ declines [7]. Well-designed ecological monitoring is necessary to prioritize conservation activities effectively [9,10,11]

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