2018
DOI: 10.1177/1940082917750839
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Changing Landscapes and Declining Populations of Resident Waterbirds: A 12-Year Study in Bung Boraphet Wetland, Thailand

Abstract: Changes in wetland environments can alter the dynamics of waterbird populations. We investigated the effects of hydrological and landscape variables on the abundance of resident waterbirds (ducks, fish-eaters, large waders, small waders, and vegetation gleaners) from 2003 to 2014 in Bung Boraphet, Thailand's largest freshwater wetland. Generalized linear mixed models were used to determine the effects of environmental variables on waterbird numbers, and generalized additive mixed models were used to identify t… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…According to Sathe et al (2001), dissolved oxygen is vital in the regulation of the metabolic processes of aquatic plants and an indicator of aquatic ecosystem health. In previous studies, a significant relationship was found to exist between dissolved oxygen and waterbird populations (Thapa & Saund 2012;Sulai et al 2015;Haq et al 2018). Therefore, hydrology parameters are consid-ered among the most important factors capable of influencing the aquatic environment and in turn determining the abundance of waterbirds in wetlands, as shown in our study.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 71%
“…According to Sathe et al (2001), dissolved oxygen is vital in the regulation of the metabolic processes of aquatic plants and an indicator of aquatic ecosystem health. In previous studies, a significant relationship was found to exist between dissolved oxygen and waterbird populations (Thapa & Saund 2012;Sulai et al 2015;Haq et al 2018). Therefore, hydrology parameters are consid-ered among the most important factors capable of influencing the aquatic environment and in turn determining the abundance of waterbirds in wetlands, as shown in our study.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 71%
“…Although the probability of a species having a declining population status was unrelated to its index of diet generalism, all the species that grouped in cluster four are waterfowl (dominated by ducks and geese that feed on small food items). This finding is important, as the diet of waterfowl is limited to water bodies [2,33] and they also face pressure from harvesting by humans [34,35], disease risk [36] and other global climate and habitat change mediated challenges [10,37]. For example, some people involved in waterfowl hunting insist on sustaining this activity [38] despite the conservation risks to the populations globally.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both coastal reclamation and agricultural industrialization have occurred in Chongming Dongtan (Ma et al, ), as in other coastal regions of China (Ma et al, ), and in other counties in Asia (Haq, Eiam‐Ampai, Ngoprasert, Sasaki, & Shrestha, ; Moores, Rogers, Rogers, & Hansbro, ; Szabo, Choi, Clemens, & Hansen, ). Traditional farmland converted into industrial rice farms is a common occurrence along the EAAF (Szabo, Choi, et al, ), such as the Saemangeum region of Korea (Moores et al, ), northeastern Thailand and the Mekong Delta (Frei & Becker, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%