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The role of wetland vegetation and water connectivity in shaping waterbird populations under human disturbance

Yirong Wan, Linling Tang, Xuejiao Hou, Hui‐Chen Lin, Xiaobin Cai, Zihao Huang, Qiangqiang Xu, Yuhong He

2025Ecological Indicators6 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

• Under low human disturbance, rich abundance and diversity of waterbirds were observed. • Wetland vegetation coverage and water connectivity were the primary factors significantly impacting waterbird populations. • Wetland vegetation coverage had a more substantial influence on waterbirds in areas of low disturbance intensity. • The impact of water connectivity on waterbirds was complex under different intensities of human disturbance. The floodplain wetland of Poyang Lake, one of the largest stopover sites for overwintering waterbirds along the East Asian–Australasian Flyway, is experiencing rising human disturbance and rapid landscape changes. However, the impacts of these two factors on waterbird populations at three biological levels (i.e., the species, foraging guild, and community levels) remain poorly understood. Using multi-source remote sensing data and annual winter waterbird survey data (2013–2018), combined with statistical methods such as one-way ANOVA, generalized linear models, and redundancy analysis, we investigated landscape patterns influencing waterbird populations at three biological levels under human disturbance. Results indicated that most waterbird populations, excluding those specializing in invertebrate consumption, thrived greatly under low human disturbance intensity. Wetland vegetation and water connectivity played the most significant role among landscape metrics in shaping waterbird populations at three biological levels. The expanded wetland vegetation coverage strongly promoted waterbird populations, especially under low human disturbance intensity. Expanding main lakes with high water connectivity tended to suppress waterbird populations, while the newly formed shallow sub-lakes with limited connectivity promoted them. The role of water connectivity showed complexity across different intensities of human disturbance. Additionally, larger cropland patches benefited tuber- and seed-eating birds under low-moderate human disturbance, whereas built-up expansion harmed the waterbird community in highly disturbed areas. These findings offer useful insights for conserving overwintering waterbird populations and informing habitat management strategies in floodplain wetlands.

Topics & Concepts

Disturbance (geology)WetlandEcologyVegetation (pathology)Environmental scienceGeographyBiologyPaleontologyPathologyMedicineMarine animal studies overviewWildlife Ecology and ConservationAvian ecology and behavior
The role of wetland vegetation and water connectivity in shaping waterbird populations under human disturbance | Litcius