ECOLOGICAL STRUCTURE AMONG MIGRANT AND RESIDENT SEABIRDS OF THE SCOTIA-WEDDELL CONFLUENCE REGION

Report quantitatively assesses seasonal changes in community structure and habitat selection among seabirds in the Scotia-Weddell Confluence region, Antarctica. iscussed are biological and physical factors underlying the patterns. ata were derived from strip-transects on closely-coordinated multidis...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: D.G. Ainley, C.A. Ribic, W.R. Fraser
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: 2005
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Online Access:http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=33119
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Summary:Report quantitatively assesses seasonal changes in community structure and habitat selection among seabirds in the Scotia-Weddell Confluence region, Antarctica. iscussed are biological and physical factors underlying the patterns. ata were derived from strip-transects on closely-coordinated multidisciplinary cruises that characterized the physics and biology during Spring 1983, autumn 1986 and winter 1988. escribed for the first time ever for the Southern Ocean, seasonal changes in seabird communities in terms of composition, using cluster analysis, as well as relative density and diversity among species. ea-surface temperature, distance to the pack ice edge and ice type, all physical characteristics of habitat, were the most important environmental variables that affected assemblage composition. hree recurrent assemblages of species were identified. one persistent assemblage, present year round, was associated with the pack ice; another was associated with open waters immediately adjacent to the ice; and a third was a far-from-ice assemblage. nly the two open-water assemblages changed markedly on a seasonal basis. lose similarity of patterns in the spring of 1983 data with those collected during spring 1976 in the Ross Sea, on the other side of Antarctica, supported the contention that the authors were comparing seasonal and not interannual differences in community structure. n spite of a major reduction in the number and density of species in the open-water assemblages during winter, the pack-ice assemblage exhibited no habitat expansion, which might be expected if competition affected community structure and habitat selection.