Hierarchical foraging strategies of migratory short-tailed shearwaters during the non-breeding stage

IF 2.1 3区 生物学 Q2 MARINE & FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
Natalie Bool, Michael D. Sumner, Mary-Anne Lea, Clive R. McMahon, Mark A. Hindell
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Abstract

Foraging specialisations are common in animal populations, because they increase the rate at which individuals acquire food from a known and reliable source. Foraging plasticity, however, may also be important in variable or changing environments. To better understand how seabirds might respond to changing environmental conditions, we assessed how plastic the foraging behaviours of short-tailed shearwaters (Ardenna tenuirostris) were during their non-breeding season. To do this, we tracked 60 birds using global location sensing loggers (GLS) over a single year between 2012 and 2016 with the exception of 8 individuals that were tracked over 2 consecutive years. Birds predominantly foraged in either the Sea of Okhotsk/North Pacific Ocean (Western strategy) or the southeast Bering Sea/North Pacific (Eastern strategy). The eight birds tracked for 2 consecutive years all returned to the same core areas, indicating that these birds were faithful to foraging areas between years, although the time spent there varied, probably in response to local changes in food availability. Overall, 50% of the birds we tracked left their core area towards the end of the non-breeding period, moving into the Chukchi Sea, suggesting that the birds have flexible intra-seasonal foraging strategies whereby they follow prey aggregations. We hypothesise that seasonal declines in chlorophyll a concentrations in their primary core foraging areas coincide with changes in the availability of large-bodied krill, an important food source for short-tailed shearwaters. Decreasing prey abundance likely prompts the movement of birds out of their core foraging areas in search of food elsewhere. This strategy, through which individuals initially return to familiar areas but disperse if food is limited, provides a mechanism that allows the birds to respond to the effects of climate variability.

Abstract Image

洄游短尾剪鸥在非繁殖期的分层觅食策略
觅食特化在动物种群中很常见,因为它能提高个体从已知的可靠来源获取食物的速度。然而,觅食的可塑性在多变或变化的环境中可能也很重要。为了更好地了解海鸟如何应对不断变化的环境条件,我们评估了短尾剪鸥(Ardenna tenuirostris)在非繁殖季节的觅食行为的可塑性。为此,我们使用全球定位传感记录仪(GLS)在2012年至2016年期间对60只鸟类进行了一年的追踪,只有8只连续追踪了两年。鸟类主要在鄂霍次克海/北太平洋(西部战略)或白令海东南部/北太平洋(东部战略)觅食。连续两年跟踪的 8 只鸟类都回到了相同的核心区域,这表明这些鸟类在不同年份之间忠实于觅食区域,尽管在那里停留的时间不尽相同,可能是为了应对当地食物供应的变化。总体而言,我们追踪到的鸟类中有 50%在非繁殖期结束时会离开核心区域,进入楚科奇海,这表明这些鸟类具有灵活的季节性觅食策略,它们会跟随猎物聚集。我们假设,短尾剪嘴鸥主要核心觅食区叶绿素 a 浓度的季节性下降与短尾剪嘴鸥的重要食物来源--大体磷虾的可获得性的变化相吻合。猎物数量的减少可能会促使鸟类离开核心觅食区,到其他地方寻找食物。通过这种策略,个体最初会返回熟悉的区域,但如果食物有限,它们就会分散开来,这种策略提供了一种机制,使鸟类能够应对气候变异的影响。
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来源期刊
Marine Biology
Marine Biology 生物-海洋与淡水生物学
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
8.30%
发文量
133
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: Marine Biology publishes original and internationally significant contributions from all fields of marine biology. Special emphasis is given to articles which promote the understanding of life in the sea, organism-environment interactions, interactions between organisms, and the functioning of the marine biosphere.
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