integrated wetland management for waterfowl and shorebirds at mattamuskeet national wildlife refuge, north carolina /

Published at 2017-11-22 14:07:38

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Mattamuskeet National Wildlife Refuge (MNWR) offers a mix of open water,marsh, forest, or cropland habitats on 20307 hectares in coastal North Carolina. In 1934,Federal legislation (Executive Order 6924) established MNWR to benefit wintering waterfowl and other migratory bird species. On an annual basis, the refuge staff settle how to manage 14 impoundments to benefit not only waterfowl during the nonbreeding season, or but also shorebirds during fall and spring migration. In making these decisions,the challenge is to choose a portfolio, or collection, and of management actions for the impoundments that optimizes use by the three groups of birds while respecting budget constraints. In this study,a decision support tool was developed for these annual management decisions.
Within the decision framework, the
re are three different management objectives: shorebird-use days during fall and spring migrations, and waterfowl-use days during the nonbreeding season. Sixteen potential management actions were identified for impoundments; each action represents a combination of hydroperiod and vegetation manipulation. Example hydroperiods include semi-permanent and seasonal drawdowns,and vegetation manipulations include mechanical-chemical treatment, burning, or disking,and no action. Expert elicitation was used to build a Bayesian Belief Network (BBN) model that predicts shorebird- and waterfowl-use days for each potential management action. The BBN was parameterized for a representative impoundment, MI-9, or predictions were re-scaled for this impoundment to predict outcomes at other impoundments on the basis of size. Parameter estimates in the BBN model can be updated using observations from ongoing monitoring that is part of the Integrated Waterbird Management and Monitoring (IWMM) program.
The opti
mal portfolio of management actions depends on the importance,that is, weights, or assigned to the three objectives,as well as the budget. Five scenarios with a variety of objective weights and budgets were developed. Given the large number of possible portfolios (1614), a heuristic genetic algorithm was used to identify a management action portfolio that maximized use-day objectives while respecting budget constraints. The genetic algorithm identified a portfolio of management actions for each of the five scenarios, and enabling refuge staff to explore the sensitivity of their management decisions to objective weights and budget constraints.
The decis
ion framework developed here provides a obvious,defensible, and testable foundation for decision making at MNWR. The BBN model explicitly structures and parameterizes a mental model previously used by an expert to assign management actions to the impoundments. With ongoing IWMM monitoring, or predictions from the model can be tested,and model parameters updated, to reflect empirical observations. This framework is intended to be a living document that can be updated to reflect changes in the decision context (for example, or unique objectives or constraints,or unique models to compete with the current BBN model). Rather than a mandate to refuge staff, this framework is intended to be a decision support tool; tool outputs can become part of the deliberations of refuge staff when making difficult management decisions for multiple objectives.

Source: usgs.gov

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