Hawaii ESI: BIRDS (Bird Polygons)
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This data set contains sensitive biological resource data for endangered waterbirds and passerine birds, migratory shorebirds and waterfowl, gulls and terns, seabirds, raptors, and wading birds in coastal Hawaii. Vector polygons in this data set represent locations of bird nesting and foraging sites. Species-specific abundance, seasonality, status, life history, and source information are stored in relational data tables (described below) designed to be used in conjunction with this spatial data layer. This data set comprises a portion of the Environmental Sensitivity Index (ESI) data for Hawaii. ESI data characterize the marine and coastal environments and wildlife by their sensitivity to spilled oil. The ESI data include information for three main components: shoreline habitats, sensitive biological resources, and human-use resources. See also the NESTS data layer, part of the larger Hawaii ESI database, for additional bird information.
Data Release for Assessing the Impact of Changing Water Resources on Migratory Bird Health and Management in the Central Flyway of the United States
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There is a growing movement within natural resource management to view wildlife health as a cumulative outcome of many different factors, rather than simply the absence of disease. This inclusive understanding of health opens the door to management options that are more creative than traditional techniques to prevent or mitigate pathogens. The public health field uses a determinants of health framework to understand the physical, social, and cultural systems that impact health at the individual and community levels (National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine 2016). Applying a similar framework to wildlife can help managers focus on tangible actions to positively impact wildlife health in the absence of disease (Wittrock et al. 2019). In the south-central United States, changes in water availability and quality resulting from changing temperature, precipitation, and land-use patterns can have significant impacts on the health of migratory birds that depend on wildlife refuges as seasonal habitat. These data were collected in partnership with several U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service National Wildlife Refuges across Oklahoma (n=2), New Mexico (n=3), and Louisiana (n=1, 8 individual refuges administratively grouped within the Southeast Louisiana Refuge Complex) to examine how managers define determinants of health for migratory birds and assess how those determinants may be impacted by local changes in water regimes. This data release contains nineteen (19) related datafiles and their associated metadata. For each participating refuge there are three files: an image file of the final conceptual diagram, a .csv file containing information about the elements in the diagram, and a .csv file containing information about the connections in the diagram. The conceptual diagram of migratory bird health was constructed using information collected through interviews with refuge personnel and supplemented (to gain additional context, when necessary) with refuge management documents and information on their public-facing websites. The diagrams are provided as .jpg files exported from the free system mapping and visualization program Kumu, in which they were created. Each diagram consists of nodes (referred to as elements) and relationships (referred to as connections). The elements and connections represent elements of the refuge system that were highlighted by personnel as playing an important role in migratory bird health or water availability. Detailed, narrative descriptions for each system component are provided in their respective .csv files. There is also a .csv file containing data from a pre-interview survey sent to each refuge to gather basic information about the high-priority migratory bird guilds on their refuge, their management objectives in relation to migratory birds, and the water-related threats they consider highest concern.