Code and data supporting "Extensive tracking of nomadic waterbird movements reveals an inland flyway" in Ecology and Evolution

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Created 20/01/2025

Updated 20/01/2025

The data and files in these directories underpin inland flyway analyses of Australia waterbird species. The goal is to understand the habitat use of a species across its life cycle is essential for effective management. Many waterbirds are highly mobile at range of spatial and temporal scales, which when using traditional methods such as on-ground surveys or leg-banding can make monitoring, quantifying, and predicting habitat use difficult. In this analysis, we used a 7-year GPS satellite telemetry dataset of 141 individuals to: a) quantify habitat selection post-dispersal from breeding sites, and b) predict habitat availability, for straw-necked ibis (SNI) and royal spoonbill (RSB). This research is led by CSIRO as part of the CEWH Monitoring, Evaluation and Research Program (Flow- MER). It builds on and incorporates satellite tracking of straw-necked ibis, Australian white ibis and royal spoonbills conducted by CSIRO between 2016–19 as part of the Environmental Water Knowledge and Research (EWKR) Waterbird Theme. The EWKR research identified a need for additional satellite tracking of species dependent on water to feed (such as spoonbills and egrets), not just to breed (such as ibis), and for tracking of the movements of birds from additional important sites across the Basin. The data and code in this directory were used in the analyses described in the manuscript "Extensive tracking of nomadic waterbird movements reveals an inland flyway". The manuscript presents analyses of GPS satellite telemetry data tracking the movements of 73 straw-necked ibis (SNI) (Threskiornis spinicollis) and 42 royal spoonbills (RSB) (Platalea regia) over seven years. We used these data to identify long-distance movements and to demarcate and characterise movement routes. We used Hidden Markov Modelling (HMM) to identify movement classes from the prepared tracking data with the goal of separating long-distance flight movements from foraging/roosting movements. We used the ‘kernelUD’ function from the R package adehabitatHR to estimate the utilisation distribution for all individuals of each species using the kernel density estimation method (KED). For each species, we sampled the intersection of the KED50 with known important aggregate-breeding waterbird nesting sites. We then assessed the KED50 for each species against environmental covariates to identify habitat preferences during long-distance movements. The kernels are intersected with publicly available remote sensing derived products. The MRVBF and elevation .tif files are not included but can be found at MRVBF - https://data.csiro.au/collection/csiro:5681, Elevation - https://data.gov.au/data/dataset/mcas-s-data-pack-update-2022 The rainfall map was created from monthly rainfall averaged over 2011-2020 and binned into deciles over the whole of Australia (Australian Gridded Climate Data; Evans et al. (2020)). Data were downloaded from https://geonetwork.nci.org.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/f6475_9317_5747_6204. The summary file is available with the data pack at data_env/rainfall_avg_2011_2020_decile.tif

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Additional Info

Field Value
Title Code and data supporting "Extensive tracking of nomadic waterbird movements reveals an inland flyway" in Ecology and Evolution
Language English
Licence Not Specified
Landing Page https://devweb.dga.links.com.au/data/dataset/f208a0f5-f917-5a20-9bf0-883c42be9a8f
Contact Point
Environment Protection Authority (EPA) Victoria
CSIROEnquiries@csiro.au
Reference Period 01/01/2000
Geospatial Coverage http://www.ga.gov.au/place-names/PlaceDetails.jsp?submit1=GA7
Data Portal Data.gov.au