Reduced breeding success in Great Black-backed Gulls (Larus marinus) due to harness-mounted GPS device

IF 1.8 3区 生物学 Q1 ORNITHOLOGY
Ibis Pub Date : 2023-06-13 DOI:10.1111/ibi.13247
Samuel Langlois Lopez, Gary D. Clewley, Daniel T. Johnston, Francis Daunt, Jared M. Wilson, Nina J. O'Hanlon, Elizabeth Masden
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Animal-borne bio-logging devices are routinely fitted to seabirds to learn about their behaviour and physiology, as well as their interactions with the marine environment. The assessment and reporting of deleterious impacts from such devices on the individuals carrying them is critical to inform future work and improve data quality and animal welfare. We assessed the impacts of thoracic-harness attachments on the breeding performance and inter-annual return rates of Great Black-backed Gulls. We found that tagged individuals hatched fewer eggs per nest (0.67) than two different control groups (handled but not tagged – 2.0, and not handled – 1.9) and had lower hatching success rates per nest (27% compared with 81% and 82% in control groups). Inter-annual return rates were similar between tagged and control groups, but the harness attachment potentially caused the death of an individual 5 days after deployment. Overall, the harness attachment was a lead driver of nest failure. We urge extreme caution for those wanting to use harness-mounted devices on Great Black-backed Gulls.

Abstract Image

大黑背鸥(Larus marinus)的繁殖成功率降低,原因是背带上安装了GPS设备
为了解海鸟的行为和生理以及它们与海洋环境的相互作用,海鸟身上通常会安装动物携带的生物记录装置。评估和报告此类装置对携带者造成的有害影响对于未来的工作、提高数据质量和动物福利至关重要。我们评估了胸带对大黑背鸥繁殖性能和年际回归率的影响。我们发现,与两个不同的对照组(有处理但无标记-2.0,无处理-1.9)相比,被标记的个体每个巢孵化的卵数(0.67)更少,而且每个巢的孵化成功率也更低(27%,而对照组分别为81%和82%)。标签组和对照组的年际回归率相似,但背带固定装置可能导致一只个体在部署5天后死亡。总体而言,绳套是导致巢失败的主要原因。我们建议那些想在大黑背鸥身上使用背带装置的人要格外小心。
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来源期刊
Ibis
Ibis 生物-鸟类学
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
9.50%
发文量
118
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: IBIS publishes original papers, reviews, short communications and forum articles reflecting the forefront of international research activity in ornithological science, with special emphasis on the behaviour, ecology, evolution and conservation of birds. IBIS aims to publish as rapidly as is consistent with the requirements of peer-review and normal publishing constraints.
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