Litcius/Paper detail

Effects of COVID-19 lockdowns on shorebird assemblages in an urban South African sandy beach ecosystem

Jemma Lewis, Jayden Collison, Deena Pillay

2022Scientific Reports15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Human pressures are pervasive in coastal ecosystems, but their effect magnitudes are masked by methodological limitations. Government lockdowns associated with the global COVID-19 pandemic can address this gap since lockdowns are effectively manipulations of human presence in ecosystems at scales unachievable otherwise. We illustrate this using a study on shorebirds in an urban South African sandy beach ecosystem. Data collected prior to (2019) and during the COVID-19 (2020) pandemic indicated an inverse relationship between shorebird and human numbers, but this was stronger in 2020. In 2020, human exclusion resulted in a six-fold increase in shorebird abundance relative to 2019. Following easing of lockdowns, shorebird abundance declined by 79.6% with a 34.1% increase in human density. Our findings highlight the sensitivity of shorebirds to recreational disturbance, the potential for current methodological approaches to underestimate repercussions of disturbance and the capacity for COVID-19 lockdowns to refine understanding of human-induced stress in ecosystems.

Topics & Concepts

EcosystemRecreationDisturbance (geology)Abundance (ecology)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)EcologyGeographyPandemic2019-20 coronavirus outbreakEnvironmental scienceBiologyOutbreakInfectious disease (medical specialty)DiseasePathologyPaleontologyVirologyMedicineCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesClimate Change, Adaptation, MigrationCOVID-19 impact on air quality