A closed-population mark-resighting estimate of the number of Spoon-billed Sandpipers at Leizhou Peninsula, Guangdong Province, China during the boreal winter
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Authors
Leung, Kar-Sin Katherine
Choi, Chi-Yeung
Clark, Nigel A
He, Tao
Martinez, Jonathan
Ren, Xiaotong
Ziang, Le
Xue, Wenjie
Journal Title
Journal of Asian Ornithology
Type
Article
This Version
AM
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Leung, K. K., Choi, C., Clark, N. A., He, T., Martinez, J., Ren, X., Ziang, L., et al. A closed-population mark-resighting estimate of the number of Spoon-billed Sandpipers at Leizhou Peninsula, Guangdong Province, China during the boreal winter. Journal of Asian Ornithology https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.78585
Abstract
Critically Endangered Spoon-billed Sandpipers Calidris pygmaea migrate from their breeding grounds in Russia to winter on the coasts of southern China and South-east Asia. Previous studies on Leizhou Peninsula, Guangdong Province, China have shown that the species is present there in winter, as well as during the autumn and spring migration periods. However, there have been no formal estimates of the number of birds present. In November–December 2020 we conducted systematic searches for Spoon-billed Sandpipers marked individually with leg flags at Tujiao (Leizhou Peninsula) and also made scan surveys there to estimate the proportion of birds with marks. We used these data in combination to make a closed-population mark-resighting estimate of the local population in the Tujiao study area of approximately 60 individuals. Our estimate and its lower 95% confidence limit are both considerably larger than the 33 birds found during a co-ordinated count at Donghai Island, Hebei and Tujiao combined a few weeks later. This may be because raw counts tend to miss some individuals and therefore underestimate the total. The total for Tujiao represents about 8% of the estimated world population in winter, making it the second most important known wintering site after the Upper Gulf of Mottama in Myanmar.
Sponsorship
We thank all reserve staff members, volunteers and field assistants involved in this study. We thank the Zhanjiang Mangrove National Nature Reserve for facilitating our fieldwork and Lilian Lin for logistic support. The fieldwork was financially supported by the Shenzhen Mangrove Wetlands Conservation Foundation (K2029Z008).
Embargo Lift Date
2100-01-01
Identifiers
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/331138
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