Document of bibliographic reference 53873

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Book chapters
BibLvlCode
AM
Title
An evaluation of beached bird monitoring approaches
Abstract
Oil-pollution monitoring at sea through beach bird surveying would undoubtedly benefit from a further standardisation of methods, enhancing the efficiency of data collection. In order to come up with useful recommendations, we evaluated various approaches of beached bird collection at the Belgian coast during seven winters (1993-1999). Data received in a passive way by one major rehabilitation centre were compared to the results of targeted beach surveys carried out at different scales by trained ornithologists: ‘weekly’ surveys - with a mean interval of 9 days - restricted to a fixed 16.7 km beach stretch, ‘monthly’ surveys over the entire coastline (62.1 km) and an annual ‘international’ survey in Belgium over the same distance at the end of February. Data collected through Belgian rehabilitation centres concern injured, living birds collected in a non-systematic way. Oil rates derived from these centres appear to be strongly biased to oiled auks and inshore bird species, and are hence of little use in assessing the extent of oil pollution at sea. The major asset of rehabilitation centres in terms of data collection seems to be their continuous warning function for events of mass mortality. Weekly surveys on a representative and large enough section rendered reliable data on oil rates, estimates of total number of bird victims, representation of various taxonomic groups and species-richness and were most sensitive in detecting events quickly (wrecks, oil-slicks, severe winter mortality,…). Monthly surveys gave comparable results, although they overlooked some important beaching events and demonstrated slightly higher oil rates, probably due to the higher chance to miss short-lasting wrecks of auks. Since the monthly surveys in Belgium were carried out by a network of volunteers and were spread over a larger beach section, they should be considered as best performing. Single ‘international beached bird surveys’ in February gave reliable data on total victim number (once the mean ratio between numbers in various months is known) and oil rate (provided a sufficiently large sample can be collected), but failed in tracking events. It is a particularly attractive approach because of its long tradition, resulting in invaluable long-term databases, and the uniformity in which these surveys are organised on a large scale. The minimal distance for a monthly survey amounts to 25-30 km (40-50% of Belgian coastline) up to 40 km (65%) in order to attain sound figures for oil rate and species-richness respectively. These distances are primarily determined by the number of bird corpses that may be collected and are hence a function of beaching intensity and corpse detection rate.
Bibliographic citation
Seys, J.; Offringa, H.; Van Waeyenberge, J.; Meire, P.; Kuijken, E. (2002). An evaluation of beached bird monitoring approaches, in: Seys, J. (2001). Het gebruik van zee- en kustvogelgegevens ter ondersteuning van het beleid en beheer van de Belgische kustwateren. pp. 109-122
Topic
Marine

Authors

author
Name
Jan Seys
Identifier
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1131-6740
Affiliation
Instituut voor Natuurbehoud
author
author
Name
Jeroen Van Waeyenberge
Affiliation
Instituut voor Natuurbehoud
author
Name
Patrick Meire
Identifier
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2599-5350
Affiliation
Universiteit Antwerpen; Faculteit Wetenschappen; Departement Biologie
author
Name
Eckhart Kuijken
Affiliation
Instituut voor Natuurbehoud

thesaurus terms

term
Marine birds (term code: 4992 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)
Methodology (term code: 5176 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)
Monitoring (term code: 5312 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)
Oil pollution (term code: 5752 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)

Other terms

other terms associated with this publication
Beached bird surveys
Rehabilitation centre

taxonomic terms

taxonomic terms associated with this publication
Aves [Birds]

geographic terms

geographic terms associated with this publication
ANE, Belgium
ANE, North Sea

Document metadata

date created
2003-11-26
date modified
2018-07-19