Title of article
Modelling populations of long-lived birds of prey for conservation: A study of imperial eagles (Aquila heliaca) in Kazakhstan Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Todd E. Katzner، نويسنده , , Evgeny A. Bragin، نويسنده , , E.J. Milner-Gulland، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
14
From page
322
To page
335
Abstract
Eagle populations worldwide are in decline and their demography is generally poorly understood. We use novel sensitivity analysis of stochastic simulation models to analyse the demography of the worlds highest-density and longest-studied population of eastern imperial eagles (Aquila heliaca), at the Naurzum National Nature Reserve in Kazakhstan. Single variable perturbation (a simple elasticity-type analysis) showed that population growth was most sensitive to changes in adult survival but provided no information on how interactions between parameters may influence population growth. Multiple-variable perturbations (a more comprehensive elasticity-type analysis) suggested that population growth is relatively more sensitive to adult survival than is indicated by single-variable perturbation but also that when adult survival is within a biologically reasonable range, other parameters are still highly consequential to model outputs. For Naurzum’s imperial eagles, and for other structured populations of vertebrates, effective conservation and management likely requires an approach that addresses the importance of simultaneous variation in multiple vital rates including both survivorship and reproductive output.
Keywords
Multiple-variable perturbation , Sensitivity analysis , Aquila heliaca , Demographic models , Kazakhstan
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Record number
837643
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