Spatial relations among coastal bird populations in NEW! Delta estuaries and ports, Exploration of how metapopulation concept can provide new clues for the conservation of protected coastal bird species with the Common Tern as example

Coastal and estuarine habitats are important and nowadays sensitive systems. Dykes have been built to harvest land from the sea, cities and ports were developed, sea-arms were dammed and beaches and dunes "flooded" with recreants. As a result, coastal birds that depend on temporary natural islands and sand and shell banks for their breeding colonies now suffer from a lack of breeding grounds. Harbours and port areas often include newly developed terrains which offer suitable areas for breeding and are relatively undisturbed by recreants.

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Main Authors: Snep, R.P.H., Schotman, A.G.M., Jochem, R., Schippers, P., van der Veen, J.W., Griffioen, A.J., Slim, P.A.
Format: External research report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Alterra
Subjects:deltas, fauna, harbours, natura 2000, nature compensation, population dynamics, waterfowl, delta's, havens, natuurcompensatie, populatiedynamica, watervogels,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/spatial-relations-among-coastal-bird-populations-in-new-delta-est
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-3619422024-06-25 Snep, R.P.H. Schotman, A.G.M. Jochem, R. Schippers, P. van der Veen, J.W. Griffioen, A.J. Slim, P.A. External research report Spatial relations among coastal bird populations in NEW! Delta estuaries and ports, Exploration of how metapopulation concept can provide new clues for the conservation of protected coastal bird species with the Common Tern as example 2007 Coastal and estuarine habitats are important and nowadays sensitive systems. Dykes have been built to harvest land from the sea, cities and ports were developed, sea-arms were dammed and beaches and dunes "flooded" with recreants. As a result, coastal birds that depend on temporary natural islands and sand and shell banks for their breeding colonies now suffer from a lack of breeding grounds. Harbours and port areas often include newly developed terrains which offer suitable areas for breeding and are relatively undisturbed by recreants. en Alterra application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/spatial-relations-among-coastal-bird-populations-in-new-delta-est https://edepot.wur.nl/25828 deltas fauna harbours natura 2000 nature compensation population dynamics waterfowl delta's fauna havens natura 2000 natuurcompensatie populatiedynamica watervogels Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic deltas
fauna
harbours
natura 2000
nature compensation
population dynamics
waterfowl
delta's
fauna
havens
natura 2000
natuurcompensatie
populatiedynamica
watervogels
deltas
fauna
harbours
natura 2000
nature compensation
population dynamics
waterfowl
delta's
fauna
havens
natura 2000
natuurcompensatie
populatiedynamica
watervogels
spellingShingle deltas
fauna
harbours
natura 2000
nature compensation
population dynamics
waterfowl
delta's
fauna
havens
natura 2000
natuurcompensatie
populatiedynamica
watervogels
deltas
fauna
harbours
natura 2000
nature compensation
population dynamics
waterfowl
delta's
fauna
havens
natura 2000
natuurcompensatie
populatiedynamica
watervogels
Snep, R.P.H.
Schotman, A.G.M.
Jochem, R.
Schippers, P.
van der Veen, J.W.
Griffioen, A.J.
Slim, P.A.
Spatial relations among coastal bird populations in NEW! Delta estuaries and ports, Exploration of how metapopulation concept can provide new clues for the conservation of protected coastal bird species with the Common Tern as example
description Coastal and estuarine habitats are important and nowadays sensitive systems. Dykes have been built to harvest land from the sea, cities and ports were developed, sea-arms were dammed and beaches and dunes "flooded" with recreants. As a result, coastal birds that depend on temporary natural islands and sand and shell banks for their breeding colonies now suffer from a lack of breeding grounds. Harbours and port areas often include newly developed terrains which offer suitable areas for breeding and are relatively undisturbed by recreants.
format External research report
topic_facet deltas
fauna
harbours
natura 2000
nature compensation
population dynamics
waterfowl
delta's
fauna
havens
natura 2000
natuurcompensatie
populatiedynamica
watervogels
author Snep, R.P.H.
Schotman, A.G.M.
Jochem, R.
Schippers, P.
van der Veen, J.W.
Griffioen, A.J.
Slim, P.A.
author_facet Snep, R.P.H.
Schotman, A.G.M.
Jochem, R.
Schippers, P.
van der Veen, J.W.
Griffioen, A.J.
Slim, P.A.
author_sort Snep, R.P.H.
title Spatial relations among coastal bird populations in NEW! Delta estuaries and ports, Exploration of how metapopulation concept can provide new clues for the conservation of protected coastal bird species with the Common Tern as example
title_short Spatial relations among coastal bird populations in NEW! Delta estuaries and ports, Exploration of how metapopulation concept can provide new clues for the conservation of protected coastal bird species with the Common Tern as example
title_full Spatial relations among coastal bird populations in NEW! Delta estuaries and ports, Exploration of how metapopulation concept can provide new clues for the conservation of protected coastal bird species with the Common Tern as example
title_fullStr Spatial relations among coastal bird populations in NEW! Delta estuaries and ports, Exploration of how metapopulation concept can provide new clues for the conservation of protected coastal bird species with the Common Tern as example
title_full_unstemmed Spatial relations among coastal bird populations in NEW! Delta estuaries and ports, Exploration of how metapopulation concept can provide new clues for the conservation of protected coastal bird species with the Common Tern as example
title_sort spatial relations among coastal bird populations in new! delta estuaries and ports, exploration of how metapopulation concept can provide new clues for the conservation of protected coastal bird species with the common tern as example
publisher Alterra
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/spatial-relations-among-coastal-bird-populations-in-new-delta-est
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