Feeding ecology of a threatened coastal seabird across an inner shelf seascape

Feeding studies provide important information about animals and the environments in which they live. Yet little is known about the diet of the Australian Fairy Tern Sternula nereis nereis, despite the species being listed as threatened (Vulnerable) and in need of research. This study investigated th...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Main Authors: Greenwell, C.N., Tweedley, J.R., Moore, G.I., Lenanton, R.C.J., Dunlop, J.N., Loneragan, N.R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Academic Press 2021
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecss.2021.107627
https://researchportal.murdoch.edu.au/esploro/outputs/journalArticle/Feeding-ecology-of-a-threatened-coastal/991005544089507891
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Summary:Feeding studies provide important information about animals and the environments in which they live. Yet little is known about the diet of the Australian Fairy Tern Sternula nereis nereis, despite the species being listed as threatened (Vulnerable) and in need of research. This study investigated the dietary composition of this bill-loading seabird, at three colony sites of an inner shelf seascape (two marine and one estuarine) using non-invasive digital photography and direct observations (number of observations [n] = 9854). Small surface schooling, inshore spawning fishes were the most important prey at all sites. Blue Sprat Spratelloides robustus, hardyheads (Atherinidae spp.), and garfishes Hyporhamphus spp. dominated the diet, contributing 75% of all prey at each site. The abundance of these fishes, whose spawning period overlapped the Fairy Tern breeding season in south-western Australia (October to February), is likely an important factor influencing the location of Fairy Tern colonies. Multivariate statistical analyses showed that dietary composition differed significantly among colony sites, breeding seasons, between courtship and chick feeding, and time of day. Blue Sprat, Beaked Salmon Gonorynchus greyi, and flyingfishes (Exocoetidae spp.) were present in greater proportions at Rottnest Island and Penguin Island (marine sites) than at Point Walter (estuarine). In contrast, hardyheads, Tailor Pomatomus saltatrix, and Yelloweye Mullet Aldrichetta forsteri were more common at Point Walter. Garfishes were around twice as important at Penguin Island than the other sites. Differences in habitat and fish species assemblages at each site may explain the observed spatial trends in dietary composition, while environmental factors, e.g. sea surface temperature and freshwater discharge, and natural interannual variability may explain the observed temporal trends in diet. Fish donated for courtship were ∼21% (12 mm) longer than those provisioned to chicks and the composition of prey in the diet of Fairy Terns ...