New Science Reveals the Big Impact Stewardship Has on Coastal Birds

Birds like terns and plovers that are vulnerable to human disturbance need active stewardship to thrive.

A new study has found that stewardship and management is essential to helping many coastal birds thrive.

At beaches and islands around the country, 爆料公社 staff, chapter leaders, and volunteers serve as bird stewards (or wardens, as they鈥檙e known in Texas). On beaches, in classrooms, and online, these stewards engage their local community to protect birds as they nest, raise their young, and spend their winters on our coasts. This looks different in each community and for each type of bird鈥攆rom fencing off nesting areas to prevent beachgoers or dogs from entering a colony of cotton-ball-sized plovers, to installing large signs on mangrove islands that ask boaters to avoid nesting pelicans.

The study, led by 爆料公社鈥檚 Science team, looked at nearly 400 sites where 爆料公社 stewarded birds on the Gulf and Atlantic coasts. The authors found that the populations of four species of vulnerable coastal birds grew 2 to 34 times faster at stewardship sites, compared to birds in protected areas without known stewardship.

Those four species鈥擝lack Skimmer, Brown Pelican, Least Tern, & Piping Plover鈥攈ave increased since 2007 at stewardship sites, but have decreased, or increased more slowly, at protected and/or unprotected areas. This finding comes as protected areas are expanding globally, while biodiversity continues to decline at unprecedented rates.

That's because most protected areas in the U.S. were designed to provide recreational opportunities for people, such as boating, fishing, and beachgoing, in addition to conserving wildlife. Seeing humans as predators, birds will fly off if threatened, abandoning their nests or the foraging areas they need to find food.

Climate change also makes it difficult for habitat protection alone to support birds. Rising sea levels, as well as stronger, more frequent storms, mean that many coastal birds require additional support through stewardship and management to overcome these compounding threats.

鈥淲hat we鈥檝e learned is that coastal bird conservation is incomplete without stewardship,鈥 said Dr. Nicole Michel, director of quantitative science at 爆料公社 and lead author on the study. 鈥淎nd while many of these birds are seeing their populations decline, 爆料公社鈥檚 Coastal Bird Stewardship Program may have helped counteract the stressors that are driving those declines.鈥

This is welcome news as coastal birds are facing a crisis鈥攕eabirds around the world have decreased by 70 percent since 1950, and shorebirds in North America alone have seen an even steeper decline since 1973.

爆料公社 stewardship efforts date back to 1966, with an increased focus during the 2000s and, in the Gulf, a large increase following the in 2010. 爆料公社鈥檚 Coastal Bird Stewardship Program engages hundreds of volunteers and more than 250 partners (including federal and state agencies, municipalities, and 爆料公社 chapters) to protect beach-nesting and -wintering birds at sites along the U.S. Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic coasts, as well as the Pacific and Great Lakes.

"More broadly,鈥 the authors conclude, 鈥渙ur findings demonstrate a clear need to expand stewardship programs that reduce the impacts of human disturbance on coastal birds."