Responses of Great Skuas to climate

Forecast climate scenarios indicate global surface temperature to rise by up to 5.8 Celsius degrees (C°) by 2100, although considerably more at high-latitudes. Possible responses of long-lived species, such as seabirds, to climate change are less easy to predict. The Great Skua, Catharacta skua, ada...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Oswald, Stephen Alexander
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Leeds 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/7864/
https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/7864/1/S_OSWALD_PHD.pdf
id ftwhiterose:oai:etheses.whiterose.ac.uk:7864
record_format openpolar
spelling ftwhiterose:oai:etheses.whiterose.ac.uk:7864 2023-05-15T15:14:31+02:00 Responses of Great Skuas to climate Oswald, Stephen Alexander 2005-06 text https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/7864/ https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/7864/1/S_OSWALD_PHD.pdf en eng University of Leeds https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/7864/1/S_OSWALD_PHD.pdf Oswald, Stephen Alexander (2005) Responses of Great Skuas to climate. PhD thesis, University of Leeds. cc_by_nc_sa CC-BY-NC-SA Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2005 ftwhiterose 2023-01-30T21:20:46Z Forecast climate scenarios indicate global surface temperature to rise by up to 5.8 Celsius degrees (C°) by 2100, although considerably more at high-latitudes. Possible responses of long-lived species, such as seabirds, to climate change are less easy to predict. The Great Skua, Catharacta skua, adapted for breeding at high-latitudes, may be restricted by heat stress at southern range margins and is an ideal species for which to determine responses to climatic change. A biophysical model constructed for the Great Skua, indicated that the upper limit of the thermoneutral zone was ~10˚C and the critical limit, above which evaporative heat loss was no longer sufficient for thermoregulation, was ~20˚C. Within the next 80 years, critical levels will only be exceeded regularly at colonies in arctic Russia or south of current range margins. Field data from Foula, Shetland, in 2002 and 2003, indicated that breeding Great Skuas were currently responding to heat stress by increasing the time spent bathing at the expense of other activities. When foraging conditions were poor, however, bathing was traded-off for extra foraging time and heat was lost by panting. Within Foula, mean operative temperature (a measure of heat stress) at low altitude breeding sites was consistently greater than at higher altitudes, and adult bathing activity was correspondingly more frequent at lower altitudes. Even so, breeding performance (laying date, hatching success and productivity) was not influenced by differences in heat stress exposure, even when adult energy expenditure was high. The flexibility of adult behaviour therefore accommodated current levels of heat stress. Dispersal models indicated that Great Skua breeding populations were still expanding from artificially low levels and, if not restricted by changes in food availability, would spread throughout the coasts of western Scotland and Northern Ireland by 2100. The European Great Skua distribution is probably in equilibrium with climate and future distributions are expected to ... Thesis Arctic Catharacta skua Climate change Great skua White Rose eTheses Online (Universities Leeds, Sheffield, York) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection White Rose eTheses Online (Universities Leeds, Sheffield, York)
op_collection_id ftwhiterose
language English
description Forecast climate scenarios indicate global surface temperature to rise by up to 5.8 Celsius degrees (C°) by 2100, although considerably more at high-latitudes. Possible responses of long-lived species, such as seabirds, to climate change are less easy to predict. The Great Skua, Catharacta skua, adapted for breeding at high-latitudes, may be restricted by heat stress at southern range margins and is an ideal species for which to determine responses to climatic change. A biophysical model constructed for the Great Skua, indicated that the upper limit of the thermoneutral zone was ~10˚C and the critical limit, above which evaporative heat loss was no longer sufficient for thermoregulation, was ~20˚C. Within the next 80 years, critical levels will only be exceeded regularly at colonies in arctic Russia or south of current range margins. Field data from Foula, Shetland, in 2002 and 2003, indicated that breeding Great Skuas were currently responding to heat stress by increasing the time spent bathing at the expense of other activities. When foraging conditions were poor, however, bathing was traded-off for extra foraging time and heat was lost by panting. Within Foula, mean operative temperature (a measure of heat stress) at low altitude breeding sites was consistently greater than at higher altitudes, and adult bathing activity was correspondingly more frequent at lower altitudes. Even so, breeding performance (laying date, hatching success and productivity) was not influenced by differences in heat stress exposure, even when adult energy expenditure was high. The flexibility of adult behaviour therefore accommodated current levels of heat stress. Dispersal models indicated that Great Skua breeding populations were still expanding from artificially low levels and, if not restricted by changes in food availability, would spread throughout the coasts of western Scotland and Northern Ireland by 2100. The European Great Skua distribution is probably in equilibrium with climate and future distributions are expected to ...
format Thesis
author Oswald, Stephen Alexander
spellingShingle Oswald, Stephen Alexander
Responses of Great Skuas to climate
author_facet Oswald, Stephen Alexander
author_sort Oswald, Stephen Alexander
title Responses of Great Skuas to climate
title_short Responses of Great Skuas to climate
title_full Responses of Great Skuas to climate
title_fullStr Responses of Great Skuas to climate
title_full_unstemmed Responses of Great Skuas to climate
title_sort responses of great skuas to climate
publisher University of Leeds
publishDate 2005
url https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/7864/
https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/7864/1/S_OSWALD_PHD.pdf
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Catharacta skua
Climate change
Great skua
genre_facet Arctic
Catharacta skua
Climate change
Great skua
op_relation https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/7864/1/S_OSWALD_PHD.pdf
Oswald, Stephen Alexander (2005) Responses of Great Skuas to climate. PhD thesis, University of Leeds.
op_rights cc_by_nc_sa
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-SA
_version_ 1766344969561309184