TL;DR
This study uses a novel hierarchical model to analyze bird abundance trends across multiple parks, revealing park-specific declines or increases and the influence of forest structure, with consistent trends across bird guilds within parks.
Contribution
Introduces a multi-species, multi-region removal sampling model that shares information across species and parks for improved inference on rare species and forest effects.
Findings
Bird abundance trends vary significantly across parks.
Three parks show declining bird abundance, three show increases.
Percent forest cover has the largest positive effect on bird abundance.
Abstract
Improved monitoring and associated inferential tools to efficiently identify declining bird populations, particularly of rare or sparsely distributed species, is key to informed conservation and management across large spatio-temporal regions. We assess abundance trends for 106 bird species in a network of eight national park forests located within the northeast USA from 2006-2019 using a novel hierarchical model. We develop a multi-species, multi-region removal sampling model that shares information across species and parks to enable inference on rare species and sparsely sampled parks and to evaluate the effects of local forest structure. Trends in bird abundance over time varied widely across parks, but species showed similar trends within parks. Three parks (Acadia, Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller, and Morristown) decreased in bird abundance across all species, while three parks…
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