North American bird declines are greatest where species are most abundant
University of St Andrews · Cornell University · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Efforts to address declines of North American birds have been constrained by limited availability of fine-scale information about population change. By using participatory science data from eBird, we estimated continental population change and relative abundance at 27-kilometer resolution for 495 bird species from 2007 to 2021. Results revealed high and previously undetected spatial heterogeneity in trends; although 75% of species were declining, 97% of species showed separate areas of significantly increasing and decreasing populations. Populations tended to decline most steeply in strongholds where species were most abundant, yet they fared better where species were least abundant. These high-resolution…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 60.79
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 71
Authors
16- AJAlison JohnstonCorresponding
University of St Andrews, Cornell University, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
- ADAmanda D. Rodewald
Cornell University, Louisiana Department of Natural Resources, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
- MSMatthew Strimas‐Mackey
Cornell University, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
- TATom Auer
Cornell University, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
- WMWesley M. Hochachka
Cornell University, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Topics & keywords
- Abundance (ecology)
- Geography
- Population
- Ecology
- Habitat
- Relative species abundance
- Bird conservation
- Biology
- Life in Land