A mystery solved - How and where do guillemot chicks spend their second half of their rearing period?

Abstract: A recent decline in the Norwegian populations of Brünnich's and common guillemots, the largest living auks and constituting a substantial amount of North Atlantic seabird biomass, is causing considerable concern. Both species share a very special, semi-precocious breeding strategy wit...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: 3rd World Seabird Conference 2021, Merkel, Benjamin
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Underline Science Inc. 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.48448/fg1n-bt74
https://underline.io/lecture/34716-a-mystery-solved---how-and-where-do-guillemot-chicks-spend-their-second-half-of-their-rearing-periodquestion
id ftdatacite:10.48448/fg1n-bt74
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.48448/fg1n-bt74 2023-05-15T15:16:05+02:00 A mystery solved - How and where do guillemot chicks spend their second half of their rearing period? 3rd World Seabird Conference 2021 Merkel, Benjamin 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.48448/fg1n-bt74 https://underline.io/lecture/34716-a-mystery-solved---how-and-where-do-guillemot-chicks-spend-their-second-half-of-their-rearing-periodquestion unknown Underline Science Inc. Animal Biology Animal Science Ornithology MediaObject article Conference talk Audiovisual 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.48448/fg1n-bt74 2022-02-09T11:22:26Z Abstract: A recent decline in the Norwegian populations of Brünnich's and common guillemots, the largest living auks and constituting a substantial amount of North Atlantic seabird biomass, is causing considerable concern. Both species share a very special, semi-precocious breeding strategy with the single chick spending roughly a month on narrow cliff ledges before jumping off while still unable to fly and moving out to sea accompanied by its father. The chicks fledge somewhere on the open ocean. Where they go and how they spend this second half of their rearing period has always been a mystery. With dramatic increases in human impact and activity in the world's oceans over the last decades, it has thus become paramount to document this crucial part of the guillemot life cycle to be able to successfully preserve these threatened species. In this study, we documented and quantified for the first-time the swimming migration of guillemot chicks from when they left the breeding ledge until fledging. To do this, we attached satellite transmitters to chicks of both species immediately before jumping at a high-Arctic colony where they breed sympatrically (Bjørnøya, 74.5°N 18.9°E). At the same time, we attached time-depth recorders to the accompanying fathers to determine the time spent until fledging. Chicks of both species moved rapidly away from the colony at an average speed of 22 to 27 km d-1 along clearly defined routes. For both species, the migration to species-specific autumn staging areas lasted about 2 to 4 weeks. As such, what is an extremely vulnerable period for guillemots is now clearly defined and seems predictable in both space and time. As a result, decisive areal planning of human activities in the areas involved is now possible to mitigate negative impacts on these species. Authors: Benjamin Merkel¹, Hallvard Strøm² ¹Akvaplan-niva, ²Norwegian Polar Institute Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Bjørnøya Bjørnøya North Atlantic Norwegian Polar Institute DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Bjørnøya ENVELOPE(-67.250,-67.250,-68.151,-68.151) Niva ENVELOPE(23.913,23.913,66.136,66.136)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Animal Biology
Animal Science
Ornithology
spellingShingle Animal Biology
Animal Science
Ornithology
3rd World Seabird Conference 2021
Merkel, Benjamin
A mystery solved - How and where do guillemot chicks spend their second half of their rearing period?
topic_facet Animal Biology
Animal Science
Ornithology
description Abstract: A recent decline in the Norwegian populations of Brünnich's and common guillemots, the largest living auks and constituting a substantial amount of North Atlantic seabird biomass, is causing considerable concern. Both species share a very special, semi-precocious breeding strategy with the single chick spending roughly a month on narrow cliff ledges before jumping off while still unable to fly and moving out to sea accompanied by its father. The chicks fledge somewhere on the open ocean. Where they go and how they spend this second half of their rearing period has always been a mystery. With dramatic increases in human impact and activity in the world's oceans over the last decades, it has thus become paramount to document this crucial part of the guillemot life cycle to be able to successfully preserve these threatened species. In this study, we documented and quantified for the first-time the swimming migration of guillemot chicks from when they left the breeding ledge until fledging. To do this, we attached satellite transmitters to chicks of both species immediately before jumping at a high-Arctic colony where they breed sympatrically (Bjørnøya, 74.5°N 18.9°E). At the same time, we attached time-depth recorders to the accompanying fathers to determine the time spent until fledging. Chicks of both species moved rapidly away from the colony at an average speed of 22 to 27 km d-1 along clearly defined routes. For both species, the migration to species-specific autumn staging areas lasted about 2 to 4 weeks. As such, what is an extremely vulnerable period for guillemots is now clearly defined and seems predictable in both space and time. As a result, decisive areal planning of human activities in the areas involved is now possible to mitigate negative impacts on these species. Authors: Benjamin Merkel¹, Hallvard Strøm² ¹Akvaplan-niva, ²Norwegian Polar Institute
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author 3rd World Seabird Conference 2021
Merkel, Benjamin
author_facet 3rd World Seabird Conference 2021
Merkel, Benjamin
author_sort 3rd World Seabird Conference 2021
title A mystery solved - How and where do guillemot chicks spend their second half of their rearing period?
title_short A mystery solved - How and where do guillemot chicks spend their second half of their rearing period?
title_full A mystery solved - How and where do guillemot chicks spend their second half of their rearing period?
title_fullStr A mystery solved - How and where do guillemot chicks spend their second half of their rearing period?
title_full_unstemmed A mystery solved - How and where do guillemot chicks spend their second half of their rearing period?
title_sort mystery solved - how and where do guillemot chicks spend their second half of their rearing period?
publisher Underline Science Inc.
publishDate 2021
url https://dx.doi.org/10.48448/fg1n-bt74
https://underline.io/lecture/34716-a-mystery-solved---how-and-where-do-guillemot-chicks-spend-their-second-half-of-their-rearing-periodquestion
long_lat ENVELOPE(-67.250,-67.250,-68.151,-68.151)
ENVELOPE(23.913,23.913,66.136,66.136)
geographic Arctic
Bjørnøya
Niva
geographic_facet Arctic
Bjørnøya
Niva
genre Arctic
Bjørnøya
Bjørnøya
North Atlantic
Norwegian Polar Institute
genre_facet Arctic
Bjørnøya
Bjørnøya
North Atlantic
Norwegian Polar Institute
op_doi https://doi.org/10.48448/fg1n-bt74
_version_ 1766346395132887040