Foraging in a dynamic environment: response of four sympatric sub-Antarctic albatross species to interannual environmental variability ...

Seasonal and annual climate variations are linked to fluctuations in the abundance and distribution of resources, posing a significant challenge to animals that need to adjust their foraging behaviour accordingly. Particularly during adverse conditions, and while energetically constrained when breed...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Carpenter-Kling, Tegan, Reisinger, Ryan, Orgeret, Florian, Connan, Maelle, Stevens, Kim, Ryan, Peter, Makhado, Azwianewi, Pistorius, Pierre
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.q2bvq83h0
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.q2bvq83h0
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Summary:Seasonal and annual climate variations are linked to fluctuations in the abundance and distribution of resources, posing a significant challenge to animals that need to adjust their foraging behaviour accordingly. Particularly during adverse conditions, and while energetically constrained when breeding, animals ideally need to be flexible in their foraging behaviour. Such behavioural plasticity may separate ‘winners’ from ‘losers’ in light of rapid environmental changes due to climate change. Here, the foraging behaviour of four sub-Antarctic albatross species was investigated from 2015/16 to 2017/18, a period characterized by pronounced environmental variability. Over three breeding seasons on Marion Island, Prince Edward Archipelago, incubating wandering (WA, Diomedea exulans; n=45), grey-headed (GHA, Thalassarche chrysostoma; n=26), sooty (SA, Phoebetria fusca; n=23) and light-mantled (LMSA, P. palpebrata; n=22) albatrosses were tracked with GPS loggers. The response of birds to environmental variability ... : Over three consecutive breeding seasons (2015/16, 2016/17 and 2017/18), GPS data loggers (CatLog-S GPS loggers, Perthold Engineering LLC USA, 50×22×8 mm, 34 g) were deployed on four albatross species on Marion Island during the incubation period (46°55’ S; 37°40’ E): wandering, grey-headed, sooty and light-mantled albatrosses. Loggers recorded locations at one-hour interval and were retrieved after one foraging trip. ...