Abstract

Scientifically-based systematic conservation planning for reserve design requires knowledge of species richness patterns and how these are related to environmental gradients. In this study, we explore a large inventory of coastal breeding birds, in total 48 species, sampled in 4646 1 km2 squares which covered a large archipelago in the Baltic Sea on the east coast of Sweden. We analysed how species richness (α diversity) and community composition (β diversity) of two groups of coastal breeding birds (specialists, i.e. obligate coastal breeders; generalists, i.e. facultative coastal breeders) were affected by distance to open sea, land area, shoreline length and archipelago width. The total number of species per square increased with increasing shoreline length, but increasing land area counteracted this effect in specialists. The number of specialist bird species per square increased with decreasing distance to open sea, while the opposite was true for the generalists. Differences in community composition between squares were associated with differences in land area and distance to open sea, both when considering all species pooled and each group separately. Fourteen species were nationally red-listed, and showed similar relationships to the environmental gradients as did all species, specialists and generalists. We suggest that availability of suitable breeding habitats, and probably also proximity to feeding areas, explain much of the observed spatial distributions of coastal birds in this study. Our findings have important implications for systematic conservation planning of coastal breeding birds. In particular, we provide information on where coastal breeding birds occur and which environments they seem to prefer. Small land areas with long shorelines are highly valuable both in general and for red-listed species. Thus, such areas should be prioritized for protection against human disturbance and used by management in reserve selection.

Highlights

  • Systematic conservation planning (SCP), aiming to preserve a variety of environments that can host a diversity of species [1], requires knowledge of how species are linked to the spatial variation of environmental conditions

  • The effect of shoreline length was dependent on land area; the number of specialist species increased strongly with increasing shoreline length when the land area was small, but the positive effect of shoreline decreased with increasing land area (p

  • Our analyses showed that the coastal breeding bird species found in the archipelago were unevenly distributed

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Summary

Introduction

Systematic conservation planning (SCP), aiming to preserve a variety of environments that can host a diversity of species [1], requires knowledge of how species are linked to the spatial variation of environmental conditions. Coastal breeding birds (i.e. species confined to maritime habitats as well as species breeding in coastal estuaries and archipelagos) are of conservation concern, given that approximately 24% of all waterbird species are categorized as Globally Threatened in the IUCN Red List 2012 [4,5,6] Such species (hereafter called specialist species since they are limited to coastal areas) may be especially vulnerable to increasing anthropogenic environmental pressures in the coastal landscape [4,7,8] as compared to other species that breed in this habitat and in other habitats (hereafter called generalist species)

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