Abstract

The popularity of using unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to survey colonial waterbirds has increased in the past decade, but disturbance associated with this bourgeoning technology requires further study. Disturbance was investigated by conducting aerial surveys with a consumer-grade quadcopter (DJI Phantom 3), while concurrently recording behavioural reactions on video. Surveys of mixed-species waterbird colonies (1-6 species per colony) were flown in horizontal transects at heights of 122, 91, 61, and 46 m, which is a typical range for collecting aerial imagery and producing high-resolution mosaicked orthophotos of nesting bird sites. An upper limit of 122 m was used due to local regulations prohibiting higher-altitude flights without federal authorization. Behavioural reactions were tallied every minute and a disturbance score was calculated for each sampling period. When compared to control periods, we found no evidence that colony-wide escape (i.e., flight) behaviour increased during drone flights, at any altitude flown. However, disturbance score increased significantly by 53% for surveys at 46 m. Some species were more sensitive to surveys than others. Laughing Gulls, in particular, exhibited a significant (125%) increase in escape behaviour for surveys at 91 m. Our results indicate when used in a capacity to gather high-resolution imagery for estimating breeding pairs, UAV surveys affected some species more than others, but severe reactions did not appear to increase for mixed-species colonies as a whole. Further study on safe operating thresholds is essential, especially at local and regional scales.

Highlights

  • Colonial waterbirds can be exposed to both recreational and investigator disturbance during the breeding season

  • We hypothesized that when conducting flight missions horizontally and at conservative altitudes (46–122 m), Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) surveys would not severely disturb nesting colonies or increase the overall magnitude of disturbance, and would not severely disturb any nesting species surveyed

  • Our objective was to investigate the effect of UAV surveys on waterbird behavioural disturbance

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Summary

Introduction

Colonial waterbirds can be exposed to both recreational and investigator disturbance during the breeding season. Recent research has addressed disturbance caused by approach angle[24,26], hovering[24,30], and low altitude flyovers[30,31], few studies have taken into consideration the impact of UAV surveys intended for obtaining high-resolution mosaicked orthophotos of large nesting sites. This type of survey is generally flown in horizontal strip transects and at reasonable heights, which enable photogrammetric ease and image stitching[32]. Further research on the ethical operation of UAVs is necessary for high altitude surveys and flight plans that benefit stereoscopic landscape photography of nesting bird sites

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