The white-chinned petrel (Procellaria aequinoctialis) on South Georgia: population size, distribution and global significance

International audience More white-chinned petrels (Procellaria aequinoctialis) are accidentally killed in fisheries than probably any other seabird in the world, but the population impact of this mortality is poorly understood, partly because there have been no recent estimates of the species'...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Polar Biology
Main Authors: Martin, A.R., Poncet, S., Barbraud, Christophe, Foster, E., Fretwell, P., Rothery, P.
Other Authors: British Antarctic Survey (BAS), Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), South Georgia Surveys, Government of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, Centre d'études biologiques de Chizé (CEBC), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), CEH Monks Wood
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2009
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s00300-008-0570-5
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00378139
Description
Summary:International audience More white-chinned petrels (Procellaria aequinoctialis) are accidentally killed in fisheries than probably any other seabird in the world, but the population impact of this mortality is poorly understood, partly because there have been no recent estimates of the species' abundance. The breeding aggregation on the sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia is believed to be larger than all others combined. We estimated the size of this population by calculating the area of suitable habitat and the density of occupied burrows within it. Some 670,000 occupied nests were estimated for the island at mid-incubation, representing 0.9 million pairs of breeding-age birds associated with South Georgia in the survey seasons (2005/06 and 06/07). This is 40–45% of the previous estimate, but still represents well over half of the global population. If the population is declining due to fishery bycatch, as is likely, the scale of annual mortality in this population alone is at least in the high tens of thousands, and plausibly hundreds of thousands.