School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Deakin University, Burwood, VIC 3125 Australia.
Mov Ecol. 2015 Aug 1;3(1):16. doi: 10.1186/s40462-015-0044-7. eCollection 2015.
Establishing patterns of movements of free-ranging animals in marine ecosystems is crucial for a better understanding of their feeding ecology, life history traits and conservation. As central place foragers, the habitat use of nesting seabirds is heavily influenced by the resources available within their foraging range. We tested the prediction that during years with lower resource availability, short-tailed shearwaters (Puffinus tenuirostris) provisioning chicks should increase their foraging effort, by extending their foraging range and/or duration, both when foraging in neritic (short trips) and distant oceanic waters (long trips). Using both GPS and geolocation data-loggers, at-sea movements and habitat use were investigated over three breeding seasons (2012-14) at two colonies in southeastern Australia.
Most individuals performed daily short foraging trips over the study period and inter-annual variations observed in foraging parameters where mainly due to few individuals from Griffith Island, performing 2-day trips in 2014. When performing long foraging trips, this study showed that individuals from both colonies exploited similar zones in the Southern Ocean. The results of this study suggest that individuals could increase their foraging range while exploiting distant feeding zones, which could indicate that short-tailed shearwaters forage in Antarctic waters not only to maintain their body condition but may also do so to buffer against local environmental stochasticity. Lower breeding performances were associated with longer foraging trips to distant oceanic waters in 2013 and 2014 indicating they could mediate reductions in food availability around the breeding colonies by extending their foraging range in the Southern Ocean.
This study highlights the importance of foraging flexibility as a fundamental aspect of life history in coastal/pelagic marine central place foragers living in highly variable environments and how these foraging strategies are use to buffer this variability.
在海洋生态系统中,确定自由活动动物的活动模式对于更好地了解它们的觅食生态、生活史特征和保护至关重要。作为中心觅食者,筑巢海鸟的栖息地利用受到其觅食范围内可利用资源的严重影响。我们检验了这样一个预测,即在资源可用性较低的年份,为雏鸟提供食物的短尾信天翁(Puffinus tenuirostris)应该通过延长其觅食范围和/或时间来增加觅食努力,无论是在近岸(短途)还是远海(长途)觅食。本研究使用 GPS 和地理定位数据记录器,在澳大利亚东南部的两个繁殖地进行了三个繁殖季节(2012-14 年)的海上运动和栖息地使用调查。
在研究期间,大多数个体每天都进行短途觅食,而觅食参数的年际变化主要是由于格里菲斯岛的少数个体在 2014 年进行了为期两天的旅行。当进行长途觅食时,本研究表明,来自两个繁殖地的个体都在南大洋的相似区域觅食。本研究的结果表明,个体可以在利用遥远的觅食区的同时扩大其觅食范围,这可能表明短尾信天翁不仅在南极水域觅食以维持其身体状况,而且可能还会这样做以缓冲当地环境的随机性。2013 年和 2014 年,与较长的远距离海洋觅食旅行相关的繁殖表现较差,表明它们可以通过扩大在南大洋的觅食范围来缓解繁殖地周围食物可用性的减少。
本研究强调了觅食灵活性作为生活史在高度可变环境中沿海/海洋中心觅食者的基本方面的重要性,以及这些觅食策略如何被用来缓冲这种可变性。