Abstract

Data from two long-term citizen science projects were used to examine the status and ecology of a Red List species, the Secretarybird Sagittarius serpentarius (Vulnerable), in South Africa. The first phase of the Southern African Bird Atlas Project operated from 1987 until 1992, and the second phase began in 2007. The Coordinated Avifaunal Roadcounts (CAR) project began in 1993 and by 1998 had expanded to cover much of the south-eastern half of the country. Data submitted up until April 2013 were used. A new method of comparing reporting rates between atlas projects was developed. Changing reporting rates are likely to reflect changes in abundance; in this instance the data suggest that the Secretarybird population decreased across much of South Africa between the two atlas projects, with a widespread important decrease in the Kruger National Park. Habitat data from the CAR project were analysed to gain insight into the ecology of the species. Secretarybirds tended to avoid transformed habitats across much of the area covered by the CAR project. In the winter rainfall region of the Western Cape, which is characterised by heavily transformed fynbos vegetation, at least 50% of Secretarybirds recorded were in transformed environments. This implies that in the Fynbos biome, at least, Secretarybirds have adapted to transformed environments to some degree. However, in the rest of the country it is likely that habitat loss, largely through widespread bush encroachment but also through agriculture, afforestation, and urbanisation, is a major threat to the species. The methods developed here represent a new approach to analysing data from long-term citizen science projects, which can provide important insights into a species' conservation status and ecology.

Highlights

  • The global population of Secretarybirds Sagittarius serpentarius is in decline, and the species was classified as Vulnerable internationally on the IUCN Red List in 2011 [1]

  • While the count data provided by the Coordinated Avifaunal Roadcounts (CAR) project are not useful for a species such as the Secretarybird, because of its low general abundance and nomadic/wide-ranging behaviour [3], the habitat use data provide information about the species’ ecology. These analyses provide important insights into the conservation status of the Secretarybird in South Africa in 2013, which would not have been possible without the existence of these citizen science data

  • Bird atlas data for South Africa suggest that the Secretarybird population declined across most of the country, and severely in the Kruger National Park, between the early 1990s and the late 2000s–early 2010s

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Summary

Introduction

The global population of Secretarybirds Sagittarius serpentarius is in decline, and the species was classified as Vulnerable internationally on the IUCN Red List in 2011 [1]. This species is generally thinly distributed under normal conditions, and exhibits varying degrees of nomadism, depending on local conditions [2]. Secretarybirds occur throughout much of sub-Saharan Africa, with the exception of forested west Africa and the Horn of Africa [2,4] Their preferred habitat is grassland, dwarf shrubland, savanna, and open woodland; they avoid forest, thicket, dense woodland and rocky, mountainous or hilly areas [2,5]. In arid areas birds are nomadic when not breeding; the more mesic the habitat, the more sedentary the birds tend to be, but when they are not breeding they usually do at least display increased local movements [2,5]

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