Image_2_Foraging Behaviours of Breeding Arctic Terns Sterna paradisaea and the Impact of Local Weather and Fisheries.JPEG

During the breeding season, seabirds are central place foragers and in order to successfully rear chicks they must adjust their foraging behaviours to compensate for extrinsic factors. When foraging, arctic terns Sterna paradisaea are restricted to the first 50 cm of the water column and can only ca...

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Main Authors: Joanne M. Morten, Julian M. Burgos, Lee Collins, Sara M. Maxwell, Eliza-Jane Morin, Nicole Parr, William Thurston, Freydís Vigfúsdóttir, Matthew J. Witt, Lucy A. Hawkes
Format: Still Image
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.760670.s004
https://figshare.com/articles/figure/Image_2_Foraging_Behaviours_of_Breeding_Arctic_Terns_Sterna_paradisaea_and_the_Impact_of_Local_Weather_and_Fisheries_JPEG/18847607
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spelling ftfrontimediafig:oai:figshare.com:article/18847607 2023-05-15T14:40:09+02:00 Image_2_Foraging Behaviours of Breeding Arctic Terns Sterna paradisaea and the Impact of Local Weather and Fisheries.JPEG Joanne M. Morten Julian M. Burgos Lee Collins Sara M. Maxwell Eliza-Jane Morin Nicole Parr William Thurston Freydís Vigfúsdóttir Matthew J. Witt Lucy A. Hawkes 2022-01-21T04:53:25Z https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.760670.s004 https://figshare.com/articles/figure/Image_2_Foraging_Behaviours_of_Breeding_Arctic_Terns_Sterna_paradisaea_and_the_Impact_of_Local_Weather_and_Fisheries_JPEG/18847607 unknown doi:10.3389/fmars.2021.760670.s004 https://figshare.com/articles/figure/Image_2_Foraging_Behaviours_of_Breeding_Arctic_Terns_Sterna_paradisaea_and_the_Impact_of_Local_Weather_and_Fisheries_JPEG/18847607 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Oceanography Marine Biology Marine Geoscience Biological Oceanography Chemical Oceanography Physical Oceanography Marine Engineering arctic tern biologging foraging behaviour wind fisheries Image Figure 2022 ftfrontimediafig https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.760670.s004 2022-01-27T00:05:26Z During the breeding season, seabirds are central place foragers and in order to successfully rear chicks they must adjust their foraging behaviours to compensate for extrinsic factors. When foraging, arctic terns Sterna paradisaea are restricted to the first 50 cm of the water column and can only carry a few prey items back to their nests at once. In Iceland, where 20–30% of the global population breed, poor fledging success has been linked to low food availability. Using GPS loggers, we investigated individual foraging behaviours of breeding adults during incubation from a large colony over four seasons. First, we tested whether foraging trip distance or duration was linked to morphology or sex. Second, we examined how trips vary with weather and overlap with commercial fisheries. Our findings reveal that arctic terns travel far greater distances during foraging trips than previously recorded (approximately 7.3 times further), and they forage around the clock. There was inter-annual variability in the foraging locations that birds used, but no relationship between size or sex differences and the distances travelled. We detected no relationship between arctic tern foraging flights and local prevailing winds, and tern heading and speed were unrelated to local wind patterns. We identified key arctic tern foraging areas and found little spatial or temporal overlap with fishing pelagic vessels, but larger home ranges corresponded with years with lower net primary productivity levels. This suggests that whilst changing polar weather conditions may not pose a threat to arctic terns at present, nor might local competition with commercial fisheries for prey, they may be failing to forage in productive areas, or may be affected by synergistic climatic effects on prey abundance and quality. Shifts in pelagic prey distributions as a result of increasing water temperatures and salinities will impact marine top predators in this region, so continued monitoring of sentinel species such as arctic terns is vital. Still Image Arctic Arctic tern Iceland Sterna paradisaea Frontiers: Figshare Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Frontiers: Figshare
op_collection_id ftfrontimediafig
language unknown
topic Oceanography
Marine Biology
Marine Geoscience
Biological Oceanography
Chemical Oceanography
Physical Oceanography
Marine Engineering
arctic tern
biologging
foraging behaviour
wind
fisheries
spellingShingle Oceanography
Marine Biology
Marine Geoscience
Biological Oceanography
Chemical Oceanography
Physical Oceanography
Marine Engineering
arctic tern
biologging
foraging behaviour
wind
fisheries
Joanne M. Morten
Julian M. Burgos
Lee Collins
Sara M. Maxwell
Eliza-Jane Morin
Nicole Parr
William Thurston
Freydís Vigfúsdóttir
Matthew J. Witt
Lucy A. Hawkes
Image_2_Foraging Behaviours of Breeding Arctic Terns Sterna paradisaea and the Impact of Local Weather and Fisheries.JPEG
topic_facet Oceanography
Marine Biology
Marine Geoscience
Biological Oceanography
Chemical Oceanography
Physical Oceanography
Marine Engineering
arctic tern
biologging
foraging behaviour
wind
fisheries
description During the breeding season, seabirds are central place foragers and in order to successfully rear chicks they must adjust their foraging behaviours to compensate for extrinsic factors. When foraging, arctic terns Sterna paradisaea are restricted to the first 50 cm of the water column and can only carry a few prey items back to their nests at once. In Iceland, where 20–30% of the global population breed, poor fledging success has been linked to low food availability. Using GPS loggers, we investigated individual foraging behaviours of breeding adults during incubation from a large colony over four seasons. First, we tested whether foraging trip distance or duration was linked to morphology or sex. Second, we examined how trips vary with weather and overlap with commercial fisheries. Our findings reveal that arctic terns travel far greater distances during foraging trips than previously recorded (approximately 7.3 times further), and they forage around the clock. There was inter-annual variability in the foraging locations that birds used, but no relationship between size or sex differences and the distances travelled. We detected no relationship between arctic tern foraging flights and local prevailing winds, and tern heading and speed were unrelated to local wind patterns. We identified key arctic tern foraging areas and found little spatial or temporal overlap with fishing pelagic vessels, but larger home ranges corresponded with years with lower net primary productivity levels. This suggests that whilst changing polar weather conditions may not pose a threat to arctic terns at present, nor might local competition with commercial fisheries for prey, they may be failing to forage in productive areas, or may be affected by synergistic climatic effects on prey abundance and quality. Shifts in pelagic prey distributions as a result of increasing water temperatures and salinities will impact marine top predators in this region, so continued monitoring of sentinel species such as arctic terns is vital.
format Still Image
author Joanne M. Morten
Julian M. Burgos
Lee Collins
Sara M. Maxwell
Eliza-Jane Morin
Nicole Parr
William Thurston
Freydís Vigfúsdóttir
Matthew J. Witt
Lucy A. Hawkes
author_facet Joanne M. Morten
Julian M. Burgos
Lee Collins
Sara M. Maxwell
Eliza-Jane Morin
Nicole Parr
William Thurston
Freydís Vigfúsdóttir
Matthew J. Witt
Lucy A. Hawkes
author_sort Joanne M. Morten
title Image_2_Foraging Behaviours of Breeding Arctic Terns Sterna paradisaea and the Impact of Local Weather and Fisheries.JPEG
title_short Image_2_Foraging Behaviours of Breeding Arctic Terns Sterna paradisaea and the Impact of Local Weather and Fisheries.JPEG
title_full Image_2_Foraging Behaviours of Breeding Arctic Terns Sterna paradisaea and the Impact of Local Weather and Fisheries.JPEG
title_fullStr Image_2_Foraging Behaviours of Breeding Arctic Terns Sterna paradisaea and the Impact of Local Weather and Fisheries.JPEG
title_full_unstemmed Image_2_Foraging Behaviours of Breeding Arctic Terns Sterna paradisaea and the Impact of Local Weather and Fisheries.JPEG
title_sort image_2_foraging behaviours of breeding arctic terns sterna paradisaea and the impact of local weather and fisheries.jpeg
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.760670.s004
https://figshare.com/articles/figure/Image_2_Foraging_Behaviours_of_Breeding_Arctic_Terns_Sterna_paradisaea_and_the_Impact_of_Local_Weather_and_Fisheries_JPEG/18847607
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Arctic tern
Iceland
Sterna paradisaea
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic tern
Iceland
Sterna paradisaea
op_relation doi:10.3389/fmars.2021.760670.s004
https://figshare.com/articles/figure/Image_2_Foraging_Behaviours_of_Breeding_Arctic_Terns_Sterna_paradisaea_and_the_Impact_of_Local_Weather_and_Fisheries_JPEG/18847607
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.760670.s004
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