Corman Anna-Marie, Mendel Bettina, Voigt Christian C, Garthe Stefan
Research and Technology Centre (FTZ) University of Kiel Hafentörn 1 25761 Büsum Germany.
Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (IZW) Alfred-Kowalke-Straße 16 10315 Berlin Germany.
Ecol Evol. 2016 Jan 20;6(4):974-86. doi: 10.1002/ece3.1884. eCollection 2016 Feb.
Reducing resource competition is a crucial requirement for colonial seabirds to ensure adequate self- and chick-provisioning during breeding season. Spatial segregation is a common avoidance strategy among and within species from neighboring breeding colonies. We determined whether the foraging behaviors of incubating lesser black-backed gulls (Larus fuscus) differed between six colonies varying in size and distance to mainland, and whether any differences could be related to the foraging habitats visited. Seventy-nine incubating individuals from six study colonies along the German North Sea coast were equipped with GPS data loggers in multiple years. Dietary information was gained by sampling food pellets, and blood samples were taken for stable isotope analyses. Foraging patterns clearly differed among and within colonies. Foraging range increased with increasing colony size and decreased with increasing colony distance from the mainland, although the latter might be due to the inclusion of the only offshore colony. Gulls from larger colonies with consequently greater density-dependent competition were more likely to forage at land instead of at sea. The diets of the gulls from the colonies furthest from each other differed, while the diets from the other colonies overlapped with each other. The spatial segregation and dietary similarities suggest that lesser black-backed gulls foraged at different sites and utilized two main habitat types, although these were similar across foraging areas for all colonies except the single offshore island. The avoidance of intraspecific competition results in colony-specific foraging patterns, potentially causing more intensive utilization of terrestrial foraging sites, which may offer more predictable and easily available foraging compared with the marine environment.
减少资源竞争是群居海鸟在繁殖季节确保自身及雏鸟获得充足食物供应的关键要求。空间隔离是相邻繁殖群体内及群体间物种常见的回避策略。我们研究了正在孵卵的小黑背鸥(Larus fuscus)在六个规模和距大陆距离各异的繁殖群体间的觅食行为是否存在差异,以及这些差异是否与所到访的觅食栖息地有关。多年来,我们为德国北海沿岸六个研究群体中的79只正在孵卵的个体配备了GPS数据记录器。通过对食物团块进行采样获取饮食信息,并采集血样进行稳定同位素分析。不同群体间及群体内的觅食模式明显不同。觅食范围随群体规模增大而增加,随群体距大陆距离增加而减小,不过后者可能是由于纳入了唯一的近海群体。来自规模较大、因而密度依赖竞争更激烈的群体的海鸥更倾向于在陆地而非海上觅食。来自彼此距离最远的群体的海鸥饮食不同,而其他群体的饮食相互重叠。空间隔离和饮食相似性表明,小黑背鸥在不同地点觅食,并利用两种主要栖息地类型,尽管除单个近海岛屿外,所有群体的觅食区域的这些栖息地类型相似。种内竞争的回避导致了群体特异性的觅食模式,这可能导致陆地觅食地点的利用更加密集,与海洋环境相比,陆地觅食地点可能提供更可预测且更容易获取的食物。