Population Ecology of Colonially Breeding Seabirds: How Intrinsic Processes, Mediating Influences, and Individual Heterogeneity Affect Population Vital Rates

Seabirds have great potential to serve as marine indicators. However, before we can interpret seabird trends with confidence, we need a better understanding of the role of intrinsic processes, mediating influences, and lifetime experience in modulating relationships between prey availability and sea...

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Main Author: McKnight, Aly
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@UMaine 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd/2651
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/context/etd/article/3731/viewcontent/D_McKnightAlyson_Final.pdf
id ftmaineuniv:oai:digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu:etd-3731
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spelling ftmaineuniv:oai:digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu:etd-3731 2023-06-11T04:10:41+02:00 Population Ecology of Colonially Breeding Seabirds: How Intrinsic Processes, Mediating Influences, and Individual Heterogeneity Affect Population Vital Rates McKnight, Aly 2017-05-13T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd/2651 https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/context/etd/article/3731/viewcontent/D_McKnightAlyson_Final.pdf unknown DigitalCommons@UMaine https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd/2651 https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/context/etd/article/3731/viewcontent/D_McKnightAlyson_Final.pdf Electronic Theses and Dissertations Seabirds population ecology survival recruitment breeding ecology capture-mark-recapture Marine Biology Population Biology text 2017 ftmaineuniv 2023-05-04T18:02:45Z Seabirds have great potential to serve as marine indicators. However, before we can interpret seabird trends with confidence, we need a better understanding of the role of intrinsic processes, mediating influences, and lifetime experience in modulating relationships between prey availability and seabird population dynamics. Intrinsic processes, mediating influences, and seabird productivity. I assessed productivity (chicks per breeding attempt) at Black-legged Kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla) colonies in Prince William Sound, AK and managed Common Tern (Sterna hirundo) colonies in the Gulf of Maine. Both systems showed evidence of intrinsic control; factors mediating access to prey were also important. Mediating influences, individual heterogeneity, and seabird productivity. Productivity integrates events over successive reproductive stages, so events at one stage can modulate the effects of events at other stages. I investigated the effects of individual age and multiple stressors on kittiwake reproduction in Alaska. I found older birds enjoyed greater success across the board, but different external influences drove success at different stages. These results highlight the need to account for both individual heterogeneity and potential interactions among extrinsic processes in interpreting seabird productivity. Individual heterogeneity and reproductive costs. Reproduction can incur short-term costs in the form of reduced parental survival or breeding activity in the following season. I found evidence of long-term costs in kittiwakes that underwent 0-4 forced nest failures in the early 1990s. Individuals that were forced to fail more were less likely to skip breeding over the following decade, presumably due to associated cost savings. The lack of an observed survival effect suggests that survival is well-buffered in long-lived species, with costs instead borne by parameters less important to lifetime reproductive success. Intrinsic processes, individual heterogeneity, and seabird survival and recruitment. I ... Text Black-legged Kittiwake Common tern rissa tridactyla Sterna hirundo Alaska The University of Maine: DigitalCommons@UMaine
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Maine: DigitalCommons@UMaine
op_collection_id ftmaineuniv
language unknown
topic Seabirds
population ecology
survival
recruitment
breeding ecology
capture-mark-recapture
Marine Biology
Population Biology
spellingShingle Seabirds
population ecology
survival
recruitment
breeding ecology
capture-mark-recapture
Marine Biology
Population Biology
McKnight, Aly
Population Ecology of Colonially Breeding Seabirds: How Intrinsic Processes, Mediating Influences, and Individual Heterogeneity Affect Population Vital Rates
topic_facet Seabirds
population ecology
survival
recruitment
breeding ecology
capture-mark-recapture
Marine Biology
Population Biology
description Seabirds have great potential to serve as marine indicators. However, before we can interpret seabird trends with confidence, we need a better understanding of the role of intrinsic processes, mediating influences, and lifetime experience in modulating relationships between prey availability and seabird population dynamics. Intrinsic processes, mediating influences, and seabird productivity. I assessed productivity (chicks per breeding attempt) at Black-legged Kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla) colonies in Prince William Sound, AK and managed Common Tern (Sterna hirundo) colonies in the Gulf of Maine. Both systems showed evidence of intrinsic control; factors mediating access to prey were also important. Mediating influences, individual heterogeneity, and seabird productivity. Productivity integrates events over successive reproductive stages, so events at one stage can modulate the effects of events at other stages. I investigated the effects of individual age and multiple stressors on kittiwake reproduction in Alaska. I found older birds enjoyed greater success across the board, but different external influences drove success at different stages. These results highlight the need to account for both individual heterogeneity and potential interactions among extrinsic processes in interpreting seabird productivity. Individual heterogeneity and reproductive costs. Reproduction can incur short-term costs in the form of reduced parental survival or breeding activity in the following season. I found evidence of long-term costs in kittiwakes that underwent 0-4 forced nest failures in the early 1990s. Individuals that were forced to fail more were less likely to skip breeding over the following decade, presumably due to associated cost savings. The lack of an observed survival effect suggests that survival is well-buffered in long-lived species, with costs instead borne by parameters less important to lifetime reproductive success. Intrinsic processes, individual heterogeneity, and seabird survival and recruitment. I ...
format Text
author McKnight, Aly
author_facet McKnight, Aly
author_sort McKnight, Aly
title Population Ecology of Colonially Breeding Seabirds: How Intrinsic Processes, Mediating Influences, and Individual Heterogeneity Affect Population Vital Rates
title_short Population Ecology of Colonially Breeding Seabirds: How Intrinsic Processes, Mediating Influences, and Individual Heterogeneity Affect Population Vital Rates
title_full Population Ecology of Colonially Breeding Seabirds: How Intrinsic Processes, Mediating Influences, and Individual Heterogeneity Affect Population Vital Rates
title_fullStr Population Ecology of Colonially Breeding Seabirds: How Intrinsic Processes, Mediating Influences, and Individual Heterogeneity Affect Population Vital Rates
title_full_unstemmed Population Ecology of Colonially Breeding Seabirds: How Intrinsic Processes, Mediating Influences, and Individual Heterogeneity Affect Population Vital Rates
title_sort population ecology of colonially breeding seabirds: how intrinsic processes, mediating influences, and individual heterogeneity affect population vital rates
publisher DigitalCommons@UMaine
publishDate 2017
url https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd/2651
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/context/etd/article/3731/viewcontent/D_McKnightAlyson_Final.pdf
genre Black-legged Kittiwake
Common tern
rissa tridactyla
Sterna hirundo
Alaska
genre_facet Black-legged Kittiwake
Common tern
rissa tridactyla
Sterna hirundo
Alaska
op_source Electronic Theses and Dissertations
op_relation https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd/2651
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/context/etd/article/3731/viewcontent/D_McKnightAlyson_Final.pdf
_version_ 1768385259757371392