Western Snowy Plover Breeding Dispersal in Response To Nest Failure in Monterey Bay, California, USA

Publication Date

9-11-2025

Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Endangered Species Research

Volume

58

DOI

10.3354/esr01431

First Page

49

Last Page

60

Abstract

We examined short-distance breeding dispersal between nesting attempts of the serially polygamous western snowy plover Anarhynchus nivosus nivosus, a federally threatened species in Monterey Bay, California, USA, during 2013–2020. We compared distances dispersed by both sexes and after various nesting outcomes. Dispersal distances within-season were generally shorter for males than females, but similar between seasons depending on nest success. We compared dispersal distances for different causes of nest failure (human disturbance, predation, environment, abandonment, and unidentified) and different predator types. Plovers with nests that failed due to human activities dispersed an average distance of 1872 m, while those with depredated nests dispersed an average of 1161 m; 58 and 31% farther, respectively, than plovers with nests that failed owing to environmental causes. However, we found no difference in dispersal distance between predator types. A best subset multiple regression model was used to determine whether winter migration status, nesting success, cause of nest failure, cumulative nests, or cumulative failed nests influence plover dispersal. Nesting success was a strong predictor variable of dispersal distances for males and females, with winter migration status adding more predictive power to the model for males. Current climate change projections suggest an increased likelihood of environmental instability, which could increase the number of nest failures to environmental causes over time. Future research should further assess the vulnerability of nesting plovers to environmental factors (e.g. sea level inundation), given the minimal predictive power of dispersal for nesting success. We hope this information can assist conservation efforts with monitoring and habitat protection.

Funding Number

2517

Keywords

Anarhynchus nivosus nivosus, Breeding dispersal, Charadriinae, Nest failure, Short-distance dispersal, Snowy plover

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Department

Environmental Studies

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