Birds : indicators of environmental repair in oil affected coastlines


Autoria(s): Wells, Dezmond
Data(s)

2010

Resumo

Bird coastal communities were studied along Bribie Island and Moreton Island, two islands within Moreton Bay, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, using the point counts method. A total of 128 five-hundred metre radius area surveys and 81 beach drive surveys were conducted and observations made over four seasons. Bird species were identified, counted and recorded. The data was compared between the two islands and, between sites on each island as oil-spill affected sites to non-oil spill affected sites. Species such as waders, shorebirds, terns/gulls and raptors were identified as species at most risk from an oil spill and the data was selected to look mainly at these species. The data indicated that sites affected by the oil spill contained 50% less oil-affected species than sites not affected by the oil spill. Bribie Island held on average 5 species per site in the oil affected sites compared to 12 species in non-oil affected sites. This same trend was observed on Moreton Island which held 6 species compared to 14 species. Bird data will continue to be counted over several years to determine whether the observed data is a true reflection of the affects of an oil spill on the habitat of shorebirds.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/59524/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/59524/2/59524.pdf

Wells, Dezmond (2010) Birds : indicators of environmental repair in oil affected coastlines.

Direitos

Copyright 2010 Dezmond Wells

Fonte

Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #060202 Community Ecology #060299 Ecology not elsewhere classified #Birds #Oil Spill #Moreton Island #Bribie Island
Tipo

Report