Behavioural and energetic constraints of reproduction: Distinguishing breeding from non-breeding northern fulmars at their colony

During the breeding season, seabird colonies are attended by active breeders, failed breeders, and non-breeding birds. Determining breeding status of some seabirds can be challenging, but tracking non-breeder attendance can provide important information on the health of the colony or the local marin...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Écoscience
Main Authors: Mallory, M.L. (Mark L.), Forbes, M. (Mark)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.carleton.ca/pub/13434
https://doi.org/10.2980/20-1-3552
Description
Summary:During the breeding season, seabird colonies are attended by active breeders, failed breeders, and non-breeding birds. Determining breeding status of some seabirds can be challenging, but tracking non-breeder attendance can provide important information on the health of the colony or the local marine environment. We used behavioural and energetic data to distinguish between breeding and non-breeding northern fulmars (Fulmarus glacialis) at a colony in the Canadian High Arctic, a region where global warming is rapidly changing the marine environment in which these birds feed. Breeding fulmars could be distinguished from non-breeders based on their larger fat reserves, although body mass and morphometrics taken in the field were not sufficient to distinguish breeding classes reliably. Behavioural cues also signaled fulmar breeding status, but observing these cues required a considerable amount of observation time. As environmental conditions in the Arctic continue to change, monitoring and population modeling efforts will require detailed observation periods rather than rapid assessments to reliably assess proportions of non-breeding fulmars at Arctic colonies.