A new satellite-based indicator to identify spatiotemporal foraging areas for herbivorous waterfowl

The distribution of food resources is a key factor in habitat selection. Herbivorous waterfowl prefer early-stage growing plants (from the onset of plant growth to the peak in nutrient biomass) as these offer higher energy intake rates. This plant development stage is not fully captured by commonly used satellite-derived vegetation indicators, which focus on plant biomass (e.g., Enhanced Vegetation Index, EVI) or active plant growth (e.g., the differential EVI between current and a previous date, diffEVI). To improve mapping suitable grazing areas for herbivorous waterfowl, we propose a new satellite-based plant growth indicator of early-stage plant growth (ESPG). We hypothesize that herbivorous waterfowl prefer plants at an early development stage during the growing season and select plants with a relatively later end of ESPG during the non-growing season. We use satellite tracking data of 20 greater white-fronted geese (Anser albifrons) wintering in the Yangtze River floodplain to validate our predictions. We build generalized linear models for goose distributions during the growing and non-growing seasons and compare the performance of ESPG to commonly used plant growth indictors (EVI and diffEVI). During the growing season, ESPG can explain 53% of variation in the goose distribution, outperforming EVI (27%) and diffEVI (34%). During the non-growing season, only the end of ESPG significantly influences goose distribution, explaining 25% of the variance (ESPG: AUC = 0.78; EVI: AUC = 0.58; diffEVI: AUC = 0.58). The newly-developed plant growth indicator ESPG could be used to improve models of herbivorous waterfowl distributions and hence support efforts toward waterfowl conservation and wetland management.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wei, Jie, Xin, Qinchuan, Ji, Luyan, Gong, Peng, Si, Yali
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Distribution, Geese, MODIS, Nutrient biomass, Plant phenology, Yangtze River floodplain,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/a-new-satellite-based-indicator-to-identify-spatiotemporal-foragi
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5451152025-01-16 Wei, Jie Xin, Qinchuan Ji, Luyan Gong, Peng Si, Yali Article/Letter to editor Ecological Indicators 99 (2019) ISSN: 1470-160X A new satellite-based indicator to identify spatiotemporal foraging areas for herbivorous waterfowl 2019 The distribution of food resources is a key factor in habitat selection. Herbivorous waterfowl prefer early-stage growing plants (from the onset of plant growth to the peak in nutrient biomass) as these offer higher energy intake rates. This plant development stage is not fully captured by commonly used satellite-derived vegetation indicators, which focus on plant biomass (e.g., Enhanced Vegetation Index, EVI) or active plant growth (e.g., the differential EVI between current and a previous date, diffEVI). To improve mapping suitable grazing areas for herbivorous waterfowl, we propose a new satellite-based plant growth indicator of early-stage plant growth (ESPG). We hypothesize that herbivorous waterfowl prefer plants at an early development stage during the growing season and select plants with a relatively later end of ESPG during the non-growing season. We use satellite tracking data of 20 greater white-fronted geese (Anser albifrons) wintering in the Yangtze River floodplain to validate our predictions. We build generalized linear models for goose distributions during the growing and non-growing seasons and compare the performance of ESPG to commonly used plant growth indictors (EVI and diffEVI). During the growing season, ESPG can explain 53% of variation in the goose distribution, outperforming EVI (27%) and diffEVI (34%). During the non-growing season, only the end of ESPG significantly influences goose distribution, explaining 25% of the variance (ESPG: AUC = 0.78; EVI: AUC = 0.58; diffEVI: AUC = 0.58). The newly-developed plant growth indicator ESPG could be used to improve models of herbivorous waterfowl distributions and hence support efforts toward waterfowl conservation and wetland management. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/a-new-satellite-based-indicator-to-identify-spatiotemporal-foragi 10.1016/j.ecolind.2018.12.016 https://edepot.wur.nl/467445 Distribution Geese MODIS Nutrient biomass Plant phenology Yangtze River floodplain https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 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 Distribution
Geese
MODIS
Nutrient biomass
Plant phenology
Yangtze River floodplain
Distribution
Geese
MODIS
Nutrient biomass
Plant phenology
Yangtze River floodplain
spellingShingle Distribution
Geese
MODIS
Nutrient biomass
Plant phenology
Yangtze River floodplain
Distribution
Geese
MODIS
Nutrient biomass
Plant phenology
Yangtze River floodplain
Wei, Jie
Xin, Qinchuan
Ji, Luyan
Gong, Peng
Si, Yali
A new satellite-based indicator to identify spatiotemporal foraging areas for herbivorous waterfowl
description The distribution of food resources is a key factor in habitat selection. Herbivorous waterfowl prefer early-stage growing plants (from the onset of plant growth to the peak in nutrient biomass) as these offer higher energy intake rates. This plant development stage is not fully captured by commonly used satellite-derived vegetation indicators, which focus on plant biomass (e.g., Enhanced Vegetation Index, EVI) or active plant growth (e.g., the differential EVI between current and a previous date, diffEVI). To improve mapping suitable grazing areas for herbivorous waterfowl, we propose a new satellite-based plant growth indicator of early-stage plant growth (ESPG). We hypothesize that herbivorous waterfowl prefer plants at an early development stage during the growing season and select plants with a relatively later end of ESPG during the non-growing season. We use satellite tracking data of 20 greater white-fronted geese (Anser albifrons) wintering in the Yangtze River floodplain to validate our predictions. We build generalized linear models for goose distributions during the growing and non-growing seasons and compare the performance of ESPG to commonly used plant growth indictors (EVI and diffEVI). During the growing season, ESPG can explain 53% of variation in the goose distribution, outperforming EVI (27%) and diffEVI (34%). During the non-growing season, only the end of ESPG significantly influences goose distribution, explaining 25% of the variance (ESPG: AUC = 0.78; EVI: AUC = 0.58; diffEVI: AUC = 0.58). The newly-developed plant growth indicator ESPG could be used to improve models of herbivorous waterfowl distributions and hence support efforts toward waterfowl conservation and wetland management.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Distribution
Geese
MODIS
Nutrient biomass
Plant phenology
Yangtze River floodplain
author Wei, Jie
Xin, Qinchuan
Ji, Luyan
Gong, Peng
Si, Yali
author_facet Wei, Jie
Xin, Qinchuan
Ji, Luyan
Gong, Peng
Si, Yali
author_sort Wei, Jie
title A new satellite-based indicator to identify spatiotemporal foraging areas for herbivorous waterfowl
title_short A new satellite-based indicator to identify spatiotemporal foraging areas for herbivorous waterfowl
title_full A new satellite-based indicator to identify spatiotemporal foraging areas for herbivorous waterfowl
title_fullStr A new satellite-based indicator to identify spatiotemporal foraging areas for herbivorous waterfowl
title_full_unstemmed A new satellite-based indicator to identify spatiotemporal foraging areas for herbivorous waterfowl
title_sort new satellite-based indicator to identify spatiotemporal foraging areas for herbivorous waterfowl
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/a-new-satellite-based-indicator-to-identify-spatiotemporal-foragi
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