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Breeding habitat use by colonially nesting waterbirds in two mid-atlantic US regions under different regimes of human disturbance
Authors:R. Michael Erwin
Affiliation:Massachusetts Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit, Department of Forestry & Wildlife, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003, USA
Abstract:More than 80% of the beach-nesting seabirds (common tern, least tern, black skimmer, and herring gull) in coastal Virginia nest on natural barrier island beaches, while in New Jersey the vast majority nest on dredge deposition material or natural marsh islands. This contrast probably results from the differences in human disturbance in the two regions. Although 75% of all oceanfront in New Jersey allows unrestricted recreation, about 85% of the Virginia beaches are ‘protected’ under the ownership of several conservation agencies. Attendant with changes in habitat utilisation in New Jersey, competitive interactions have apparently intensified with herring gulls usurping tern and laughing gull nest sites. Other implications are discussed.
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