多种产业对加拿大缅因湾东部四个种群繁殖海鸥行为的影响

IF 1.7 3区 生物学 Q3 ECOLOGY
Wildlife Biology Pub Date : 2021-04-01 DOI:10.2981/wlb.00804
S. Gutowsky, Katharine R. Studholme, Robert A. Ronconi, K. Allard, Katherine R Shlepr, A. Diamond, Jessie A. McIntyre, S. Craik, M. Mallory
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引用次数: 6

摘要

机会主义海鸥使用人为的食物补贴,这可以增加人口,但对敏感的当地生态系统和人类住区产生负面影响。在加拿大缅因湾东部,繁殖的银鸥Larus argentatus可以从水产养殖、渔业和水貂养殖场获得资源,但工业对当地海鸥种群的相对影响尚不清楚。我们的目标是1)评估来自多个种群的银鸥对自然栖息地和人为栖息地的利用;2)评估不同种群对这些栖息地内不同资源类型的利用差异;3)突出高海鸥与产业互动的区域。利用全球定位系统(GPS)对来自4个鸥群的39只海鸥进行了研究,确定了它们的访问行为(缓慢的局部运动),并将访问分配给了9种资源类型。为了评估访问的空间分布,我们创建了一个使用强度指数,反映了保真度(即重复访问)和在特定区域花费的时间。所有四种人为资源类型均被大量利用(占整个种群访问时间的56±11%),特别是鱼类植物和水貂养殖场。尽管三个群体之间距离遥远,但鸟类在特别遥远的内陆水貂养殖场重叠。相比之下,来自近距离栖息地的鸟类在访问特定的附近资源(例如鱼类植物和人类住区)方面重叠,而在近海和沿海地区的分布和利用方面则有所不同。来自三个殖民地的鸟类也经常长时间地造访无人居住的岛屿。工业显然正在影响加拿大缅因湾东部繁殖海鸥的行为,在那里,鸟类要长途跋涉,或者花费大量时间与人为资源互动,而不是长时间地访问附近的沿海岛屿。研究表明,海鸥的聚集会对生态和社会产生直接和间接的有害影响。我们的研究结果对工业管理和监管具有启示意义,以减轻对当地生态系统和人类的有害影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The influence of multiple industries on the behaviour of breeding gulls from four colonies across the eastern Gulf of Maine, Canada
Opportunist gulls use anthropogenic food subsidies, which can bolster populations, but negatively influence sensitive local ecosystems and areas of human settlement. In the eastern Gulf of Maine, Canada, breeding herring gulls Larus argentatus have access to resources from aquaculture, fisheries and mink farms, but the relative influence of industry on local gull populations is unknown. Our objectives were to 1) assess use of natural and anthropogenic habitats by herring gulls from multiple colonies, 2) evaluate variation among colonies in use of distinct resource types within these habitats and 3) highlight areas of high gull:industry interaction. Using GPS devices on 39 gulls from four colonies, we identified visitation behaviour (slow, localized movements) and assigned visits to nine resource types. To evaluate the spatial distribution of visits, we created a use intensity index, reflecting both fidelity (i.e. repeated visits) and time spent in specific areas. All four anthropogenic resource types were heavily used (56 ± 11% of visiting time across colonies), notably, fish plants and mink farms. Despite large distances among three colonies, birds overlapped at particular distant, inland mink farms. In contrast, birds from close colonies overlapped in visitation to specific nearby resources (e.g. fish plants and human settlement), and otherwise diverged in distribution and use of offshore and coastal areas. Birds from three colonies also made frequent, long visits to uninhabited islands. Industry is clearly influencing the behaviour of breeding gulls in the eastern Gulf of Maine, Canada, where birds are travelling great distances or spending large proportions of time interacting with anthropogenic resources, while otherwise paying lengthy visits to nearby coastal islands. Studies have shown that concentrations of gulls can have harmful direct and indirect ecological and societal impacts. Our findings have implications for the management and regulation of industry to mitigate detrimental effects on local ecosystems and humans.
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来源期刊
Wildlife Biology
Wildlife Biology 生物-动物学
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
33
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: WILDLIFE BIOLOGY is a high-quality scientific forum directing concise and up-to-date information to scientists, administrators, wildlife managers and conservationists. The journal encourages and welcomes original papers, short communications and reviews written in English from throughout the world. The journal accepts theoretical, empirical, and practical articles of high standard from all areas of wildlife science with the primary task of creating the scientific basis for the enhancement of wildlife management practices. Our concept of ''wildlife'' mainly includes mammal and bird species, but studies on other species or phenomena relevant to wildlife management are also of great interest. We adopt a broad concept of wildlife management, including all structures and actions with the purpose of conservation, sustainable use, and/or control of wildlife and its habitats, in order to safeguard sustainable relationships between wildlife and other human interests.
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