TY - JOUR
T1 - Sub-sampling data from the North American Breeding Bird Survey for application to the Bird Community Index, an indicator of ecological condition
AU - O'Connell, Timothy J.
AU - Bishop, Joseph A.
AU - Brooks, Robert P.
N1 - Funding Information:
This project was made possible by a grant from the USEPA administered through the USGS Patuxent Wildlife Research Center and the Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit at the Pennsylvania State University. We are indebted to Dave Bradford and Bruce Jones from the EPA's National Exposure Research Laboratory; John Sauer and Sam Droege at the USGS; Tom De Moss, Eric Walbeck, Pat Bradley, and Ron Landy with the EPA's Mid-Atlantic Integrated Assessment team; and Bob Carline and Kay Christine from the PA Coop. Unit. Many thanks are due to the Penn State Cooperative Wetlands Center and Environmental Resources Research Institute for additional administrative and logistical support. Benjamin Brooks, Emily Brooks, and Mike Lanzone helped to compile data for individual BBS routes, and Jen Rubbo and Tracy O’Connell provided helpful advice on analysis and interpretation. This manuscript was greatly improved thanks to comments from two anonymous reviewers. As with all studies incorporating BBS data, we applaud the sacrifice of the thousands of volunteer birders who make time to survey the sampling routes each spring.
Copyright:
Copyright 2008 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2007/7
Y1 - 2007/7
N2 - We examined the use of data from the North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) for assessments of ecological condition using an avian community-based indicator, the Bird Community Index (BCI). In previous research, the BCI was developed and applied to a random sample of sites in the Mid-Atlantic Highlands. The goal of providing national scale assessments with bird community indicators hinges on a demonstration that existing monitoring programs, like the BBS, can be tapped as source data for the indicators. Our goal was to compare a BBS-based assessment of the Mid-Atlantic Highlands to our original assessment based on random sampling locations. We subsampled three iterations of BBS route data from the study area to account for spatial and temporal scale differences between 40 km BBS routes and the original 1 km transects sampled to develop the BCI. All three iterations of BBS subsamples provided lower overall assessments of ecological condition for the Mid-Atlantic Highlands relative to our original research. Land cover analysis, however, revealed that BBS routes sampled land cover types in proportion to their actual prevalence in the region. Thus, we conclude that BBS data are appropriate as source data for broad scale ecological assessments with indicators such as the BCI. For numerous analytical and logistical reasons, we recommend 10-stop subsamples of BBS data as the preferred scale at which to apply bird community indicators of ecological condition.
AB - We examined the use of data from the North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) for assessments of ecological condition using an avian community-based indicator, the Bird Community Index (BCI). In previous research, the BCI was developed and applied to a random sample of sites in the Mid-Atlantic Highlands. The goal of providing national scale assessments with bird community indicators hinges on a demonstration that existing monitoring programs, like the BBS, can be tapped as source data for the indicators. Our goal was to compare a BBS-based assessment of the Mid-Atlantic Highlands to our original assessment based on random sampling locations. We subsampled three iterations of BBS route data from the study area to account for spatial and temporal scale differences between 40 km BBS routes and the original 1 km transects sampled to develop the BCI. All three iterations of BBS subsamples provided lower overall assessments of ecological condition for the Mid-Atlantic Highlands relative to our original research. Land cover analysis, however, revealed that BBS routes sampled land cover types in proportion to their actual prevalence in the region. Thus, we conclude that BBS data are appropriate as source data for broad scale ecological assessments with indicators such as the BCI. For numerous analytical and logistical reasons, we recommend 10-stop subsamples of BBS data as the preferred scale at which to apply bird community indicators of ecological condition.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.ecolind.2006.07.007
DO - 10.1016/j.ecolind.2006.07.007
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33947621110
SN - 1470-160X
VL - 7
SP - 679
EP - 691
JO - Ecological Indicators
JF - Ecological Indicators
IS - 3
ER -