Foraging ecology and parental care of common terns (Sterna hirundo) nesting in Windermere Basin, Lake Ontario

The relationships among chick feeding, size and type of prey item, and foraging time away from the brood have not been well studied in seabirds. This study investigated spatial and temporal patterns of foraging and chick-provisioning among 23 radio-tagged male common terns nesting at Hamilton Harbou...

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Main Author: Moore, David Joseph.
Other Authors: Department of Biological Sciences
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Brock University 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10464/2748
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spelling ftbrockuniv:oai:dr.library.brocku.ca:10464/2748 2023-07-16T03:58:01+02:00 Foraging ecology and parental care of common terns (Sterna hirundo) nesting in Windermere Basin, Lake Ontario Moore, David Joseph. Department of Biological Sciences 2009-10-02T13:19:59Z http://hdl.handle.net/10464/2748 eng eng Brock University http://hdl.handle.net/10464/2748 Common tern--Ecology--Ontario--Windermere Basin Common tern--Ecology--Ontario Lake (N.Y. and Ont.) Common tern--Behavior--Ontario--Windermere Basin Common tern--Behavior--Ontario Seafood gathering--Ontario--Windermere Basin Electronic Thesis or Dissertation 2009 ftbrockuniv 2023-06-27T22:07:55Z The relationships among chick feeding, size and type of prey item, and foraging time away from the brood have not been well studied in seabirds. This study investigated spatial and temporal patterns of foraging and chick-provisioning among 23 radio-tagged male common terns nesting at Hamilton Harbour, Lake Ontario during 1991 and 1992. Telemetry data were collected concurrently with behavioural observations from an elevated blind. Terns fitted with transmitters did not differ from controls with respect to either brood attendance, patterns of chick mortality, species and size distributions of prey delivered to offspring, or chick-provisioning rates. There was a clear separation of parental roles: males were primarily responsible for feeding chicks while females allocated more time to brood attendance. The prey species most commonly delivered to chicks by adults were rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) and alewife (A/osa pseudoharengus), followed in importance by larval fish, emerald shiner (Notropis antherinoides), salmonids, and fathead minnows (Pimepha/es prome/as). The relative proportions of various fish speCies delivered to chicks by males differed over the course of each breeding season, and there was also much variability in species composition of prey between years. Sizes of prey delivered to chicks also differed between sampling periods. The modal size of fish brought to chicks during Peak 1991 was 1.5 bill lengths, while the majority of prey in Late 1991 were small larval fish. The reverse trend occurred in 1992 when small fish were delivered to chicks predominantly during the Peak nesting period. During periods when predominantly small fish were delivered to chicks, the foraging activity of radio-tagged males was concentrated within a two kilometer radius of the colony. The observed variation in prey composition and foraging locations during the study likely reflects temporal variation in the availability of prey in the vicinity of the colony. Males delivered fish to chicks at a constant rate, while females ... Thesis Common tern Sterna hirundo Brock University Digital Repository Minnows ENVELOPE(-65.359,-65.359,-66.027,-66.027)
institution Open Polar
collection Brock University Digital Repository
op_collection_id ftbrockuniv
language English
topic Common tern--Ecology--Ontario--Windermere Basin
Common tern--Ecology--Ontario
Lake (N.Y. and Ont.)
Common tern--Behavior--Ontario--Windermere Basin
Common tern--Behavior--Ontario
Seafood gathering--Ontario--Windermere Basin
spellingShingle Common tern--Ecology--Ontario--Windermere Basin
Common tern--Ecology--Ontario
Lake (N.Y. and Ont.)
Common tern--Behavior--Ontario--Windermere Basin
Common tern--Behavior--Ontario
Seafood gathering--Ontario--Windermere Basin
Moore, David Joseph.
Foraging ecology and parental care of common terns (Sterna hirundo) nesting in Windermere Basin, Lake Ontario
topic_facet Common tern--Ecology--Ontario--Windermere Basin
Common tern--Ecology--Ontario
Lake (N.Y. and Ont.)
Common tern--Behavior--Ontario--Windermere Basin
Common tern--Behavior--Ontario
Seafood gathering--Ontario--Windermere Basin
description The relationships among chick feeding, size and type of prey item, and foraging time away from the brood have not been well studied in seabirds. This study investigated spatial and temporal patterns of foraging and chick-provisioning among 23 radio-tagged male common terns nesting at Hamilton Harbour, Lake Ontario during 1991 and 1992. Telemetry data were collected concurrently with behavioural observations from an elevated blind. Terns fitted with transmitters did not differ from controls with respect to either brood attendance, patterns of chick mortality, species and size distributions of prey delivered to offspring, or chick-provisioning rates. There was a clear separation of parental roles: males were primarily responsible for feeding chicks while females allocated more time to brood attendance. The prey species most commonly delivered to chicks by adults were rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) and alewife (A/osa pseudoharengus), followed in importance by larval fish, emerald shiner (Notropis antherinoides), salmonids, and fathead minnows (Pimepha/es prome/as). The relative proportions of various fish speCies delivered to chicks by males differed over the course of each breeding season, and there was also much variability in species composition of prey between years. Sizes of prey delivered to chicks also differed between sampling periods. The modal size of fish brought to chicks during Peak 1991 was 1.5 bill lengths, while the majority of prey in Late 1991 were small larval fish. The reverse trend occurred in 1992 when small fish were delivered to chicks predominantly during the Peak nesting period. During periods when predominantly small fish were delivered to chicks, the foraging activity of radio-tagged males was concentrated within a two kilometer radius of the colony. The observed variation in prey composition and foraging locations during the study likely reflects temporal variation in the availability of prey in the vicinity of the colony. Males delivered fish to chicks at a constant rate, while females ...
author2 Department of Biological Sciences
format Thesis
author Moore, David Joseph.
author_facet Moore, David Joseph.
author_sort Moore, David Joseph.
title Foraging ecology and parental care of common terns (Sterna hirundo) nesting in Windermere Basin, Lake Ontario
title_short Foraging ecology and parental care of common terns (Sterna hirundo) nesting in Windermere Basin, Lake Ontario
title_full Foraging ecology and parental care of common terns (Sterna hirundo) nesting in Windermere Basin, Lake Ontario
title_fullStr Foraging ecology and parental care of common terns (Sterna hirundo) nesting in Windermere Basin, Lake Ontario
title_full_unstemmed Foraging ecology and parental care of common terns (Sterna hirundo) nesting in Windermere Basin, Lake Ontario
title_sort foraging ecology and parental care of common terns (sterna hirundo) nesting in windermere basin, lake ontario
publisher Brock University
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10464/2748
long_lat ENVELOPE(-65.359,-65.359,-66.027,-66.027)
geographic Minnows
geographic_facet Minnows
genre Common tern
Sterna hirundo
genre_facet Common tern
Sterna hirundo
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10464/2748
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