Abstract

Resource limitations often prevent the active management required to maintain habitat quality in protected areas. Because restrictions in access or allowable public activities are the sole conservation measure in these locations, an important question to consider is whether species of conservation concern truly benefit from parcels that are shielded from human disturbance. Here, we assess the conservation benefit of protecting birds from human recreation on over 204 km of sandy beaches by (a) estimating the total area of beach‐nesting bird habitat that has been created by conservation protections; (b) quantifying the change in nesting habitat extent should further conservation protections be implemented; and (c) providing data to inform future protected area expansion. We use a maximum entropy species distribution modeling approach to estimate the extent and quality of suitable habitat for four beach‐nesting bird species of conservation concern under the existing management regime and compare it to scenarios in which the entire study area is either unprotected of fully protected from human disturbance. Managing humans has dramatic conservation returns for least terns and piping plovers, creating extensive nesting habitat that otherwise would not exist. There is considerable scope for conservation gains, potentially tripling the extent of nesting areas. Expanding conservation footprints for American oystercatchers and black skimmers is predicted to enhance the quality of existing nesting areas. The work demonstrates the utility of modeling changes in habitat suitability to inform protected area expansion on ocean beaches and coastal dunes.

Highlights

  • If one cannot catch a bird of paradise, better take a wet hen Habitat loss and declines in environmental quality are widely recognized as pivotal threats to biodiversity and wildlife populations; they are targeted by many conservation actions worldwide (Meir, Andelman, & Possingham, 2004)

  • Doing so could provide meaningful benchmarks for at least three overarching conservation questions commonly asked by wildlife managers: (a) Is the current level of protection enough to meet conservation goals? (b) Is there scope for conservation expansion? and (c) Where may human disturbance protections increase habitat quality enough to benefit target species? Here, we address these questions by using a species distribution modeling approach to test how protection

  • We provide estimates of the total area of habitat that is predicted to accommodate breeding under a scenario where all potential habitat is managed to reduce detrimental impacts from recreational beach use

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Habitat loss and declines in environmental quality are widely recognized as pivotal threats to biodiversity and wildlife populations; they are targeted by many conservation actions worldwide (Meir, Andelman, & Possingham, 2004). On‐the‐ground protected areas are often a collection of ad hoc or opportunistic land acquisitions that are protected from consumptive anthropogenic activities, but that are not always actively managed to improve habitat quality (Barr, Watson, Possingham, Iwamura, & Fuller, 2016; Maslo, Lockwood, & Leu, 2015). Given that these areas receive no active conservation intervention other than restrictions in access or allowable public activities, an important question to consider is whether species of conservation concern truly benefit from parcels that are shielded from human disturbance.

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