Across landscapes and seascapes : The movement ecology of diving and flying guillemots and gulls during breeding

Most seabirds breed colonially, at which time they make central-place foraging trips. Parents must collect food both for themselves and for egg production/chick-rearing. How should they forage? I followed five species across two sites in Sweden in the Baltic Sea using GPS and time-depth recorder (TD...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Evans, Thomas J.
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Lund University, Faculty of Science, Department of Biology 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/7726510e-da4a-45b7-b586-e1a5c5ca45c6
id ftulundlup:oai:lup.lub.lu.se:7726510e-da4a-45b7-b586-e1a5c5ca45c6
record_format openpolar
spelling ftulundlup:oai:lup.lub.lu.se:7726510e-da4a-45b7-b586-e1a5c5ca45c6 2023-05-15T15:56:04+02:00 Across landscapes and seascapes : The movement ecology of diving and flying guillemots and gulls during breeding Evans, Thomas J. 2017-03 https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/7726510e-da4a-45b7-b586-e1a5c5ca45c6 eng eng Lund University, Faculty of Science, Department of Biology https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/7726510e-da4a-45b7-b586-e1a5c5ca45c6 urn:isbn:978-91-7753-186-9 urn:isbn:978-91-7753-187-6 Natural Sciences Uria aalge Larus fuscus Laridae animal flight foraging ecology movement ecology seabirds thesis/doccomp info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis text 2017 ftulundlup 2023-02-01T23:34:40Z Most seabirds breed colonially, at which time they make central-place foraging trips. Parents must collect food both for themselves and for egg production/chick-rearing. How should they forage? I followed five species across two sites in Sweden in the Baltic Sea using GPS and time-depth recorder (TDR) devices, giving information on both flight and diving activity. I use a movement ecology approach, asking questions about which spatiotemporal aspects determine these species’ movement activities and on how species differ in their foraging activity. Further, I test theories of how birds should optimally vary their flight behaviour in response to winds, and of how individual birds collect information on alternative breeding sites, i.e. prospecting.Chick-rearing Common Murre (Uria aalge) from the island of Stora Karlsö (SK; 17.97°E, 57.29°N), foraged most around sunset and sunrise, when they made more frequent and shallower dives compared to at midday. They made longer distance and duration overnight trips where they visited more distant foraging areas than during daytime trips. In a following study I showed that the GPS device deployed had little measurable effect on the Common Murre’s activity, though murres did lose body mass which remains to be explained.During flights returning from foraging sites to their colony at Stora Karlsö, both Common Murre and Lesser Black-backed Gull (Larus fuscus) optimally adjust their airspeeds to minimise their costs of transport, increasing airspeed under headwinds and cross-winds, but reducing airspeed under tailwinds. While the gulls also adjusted their altitude, increasing altitude under tailwinds, thus benefiting from the faster winds higher up, but flying low, where wind is slower, under headwinds and crosswinds; the murres though always fly low, close to the sea surface.Lesser Black-backed Gull are generalist foragers, at Stora Karlsö they feed both on land and at sea. How do they choose between these? Lesser Black-backed Gull were followed with GPS and observations were made ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Common Murre Lesser black-backed gull Uria aalge uria Lund University Publications (LUP)
institution Open Polar
collection Lund University Publications (LUP)
op_collection_id ftulundlup
language English
topic Natural Sciences
Uria aalge
Larus fuscus
Laridae
animal flight
foraging ecology
movement ecology
seabirds
spellingShingle Natural Sciences
Uria aalge
Larus fuscus
Laridae
animal flight
foraging ecology
movement ecology
seabirds
Evans, Thomas J.
Across landscapes and seascapes : The movement ecology of diving and flying guillemots and gulls during breeding
topic_facet Natural Sciences
Uria aalge
Larus fuscus
Laridae
animal flight
foraging ecology
movement ecology
seabirds
description Most seabirds breed colonially, at which time they make central-place foraging trips. Parents must collect food both for themselves and for egg production/chick-rearing. How should they forage? I followed five species across two sites in Sweden in the Baltic Sea using GPS and time-depth recorder (TDR) devices, giving information on both flight and diving activity. I use a movement ecology approach, asking questions about which spatiotemporal aspects determine these species’ movement activities and on how species differ in their foraging activity. Further, I test theories of how birds should optimally vary their flight behaviour in response to winds, and of how individual birds collect information on alternative breeding sites, i.e. prospecting.Chick-rearing Common Murre (Uria aalge) from the island of Stora Karlsö (SK; 17.97°E, 57.29°N), foraged most around sunset and sunrise, when they made more frequent and shallower dives compared to at midday. They made longer distance and duration overnight trips where they visited more distant foraging areas than during daytime trips. In a following study I showed that the GPS device deployed had little measurable effect on the Common Murre’s activity, though murres did lose body mass which remains to be explained.During flights returning from foraging sites to their colony at Stora Karlsö, both Common Murre and Lesser Black-backed Gull (Larus fuscus) optimally adjust their airspeeds to minimise their costs of transport, increasing airspeed under headwinds and cross-winds, but reducing airspeed under tailwinds. While the gulls also adjusted their altitude, increasing altitude under tailwinds, thus benefiting from the faster winds higher up, but flying low, where wind is slower, under headwinds and crosswinds; the murres though always fly low, close to the sea surface.Lesser Black-backed Gull are generalist foragers, at Stora Karlsö they feed both on land and at sea. How do they choose between these? Lesser Black-backed Gull were followed with GPS and observations were made ...
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Evans, Thomas J.
author_facet Evans, Thomas J.
author_sort Evans, Thomas J.
title Across landscapes and seascapes : The movement ecology of diving and flying guillemots and gulls during breeding
title_short Across landscapes and seascapes : The movement ecology of diving and flying guillemots and gulls during breeding
title_full Across landscapes and seascapes : The movement ecology of diving and flying guillemots and gulls during breeding
title_fullStr Across landscapes and seascapes : The movement ecology of diving and flying guillemots and gulls during breeding
title_full_unstemmed Across landscapes and seascapes : The movement ecology of diving and flying guillemots and gulls during breeding
title_sort across landscapes and seascapes : the movement ecology of diving and flying guillemots and gulls during breeding
publisher Lund University, Faculty of Science, Department of Biology
publishDate 2017
url https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/7726510e-da4a-45b7-b586-e1a5c5ca45c6
genre Common Murre
Lesser black-backed gull
Uria aalge
uria
genre_facet Common Murre
Lesser black-backed gull
Uria aalge
uria
op_relation https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/7726510e-da4a-45b7-b586-e1a5c5ca45c6
urn:isbn:978-91-7753-186-9
urn:isbn:978-91-7753-187-6
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