How to translate text using browser tools
1 April 2012 Representativeness of Land Cover Composition along Routes of the North American Breeding Bird Survey
Joseph A. Veech, Michael F. Small, John T. Baccus
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

The North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) is an annual transect point-count survey of >500 species and >3,500 survey routes (transects). Observers drive and record birds seen and heard within a radius of 400 m of 50 survey points (“stops”) evenly spaced along a 39.4-km survey route. Thus, the land area along both sides of a route composes a linear or curvilinear landscape. Although BBS data have been used in many studies and conservation plans, there have been few attempts to determine how well the landscapes along BBS routes represent landscapes at larger spatial extents, particularly with regard to land-cover composition. Using data from the 2001 National Land Cover Database, we conducted a study of representativeness of 3,230 routes by comparing the differences in percent cover of 15 land-cover types in BBS landscapes (buffer width of 0.4 km surrounding a route) to larger local landscapes (10 km buffer width) and regions. At the local level, BBS landscapes were representative for most of the cover types except open water, which was underrepresented, and lightly developed open space, which was overrepresented. At the regional level, the collective composition of BBS landscapes was very similar to the composition within entire Bird Conservation Regions. Overall, these results should encourage the continued use of BBS data in ornithological and ecological research and in conservation planning.

© 2012 by The American Ornithologists' Union. All rights reserved. Please direct all requests for permission to photocopy or reproduce article content through the University of California Press's Rights and Permissions website, http://www.ucpressjournals.com/reprintInfo.asp.
Joseph A. Veech, Michael F. Small, and John T. Baccus "Representativeness of Land Cover Composition along Routes of the North American Breeding Bird Survey," The Auk 129(2), 259-267, (1 April 2012). https://doi.org/10.1525/auk.2012.11242
Received: 3 March 2011; Accepted: 1 February 2012; Published: 1 April 2012
KEYWORDS
conservation planning
GIS
habitat
landscape composition
remote sensing
route representativeness
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top