Wilkinson Bradley P, Satgé Yvan G, Lamb Juliet S, Jodice Patrick G R
1Department of Forestry and Environmental Conservation, Clemson University, Clemson, SC 29634 USA.
South Carolina Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, Clemson, SC 29634 USA.
Mov Ecol. 2019 Oct 28;7:30. doi: 10.1186/s40462-019-0178-0. eCollection 2019.
Mobile organisms in marine environments are expected to modify their behavior in response to external stressors. Among environmental drivers of animal movement are long-term climatic indices influencing organism distribution and short-term meteorological events anticipated to alter acute movement behavior. However, few studies exist documenting the response of vagile species to meteorological anomalies in coastal and marine systems.
Here we examined the movements of Eastern brown pelicans () in the South Atlantic Bight in response to the passage of three separate hurricane events in 2 years. Pelicans ( = 32) were tracked with GPS satellite transmitters from four colonies in coastal South Carolina, USA, for the entirety of at least one storm event. An Expectation Maximization binary Clustering algorithm was used to discretize pelican behavioral states, which were pooled into 'active' versus 'inactive' states. Multinomial logistic regression was used to assess behavioral state probabilities in relation to changes in barometric pressure and wind velocity.
Individual pelicans were more likely to remain inactive during tropical cyclone passage compared to baseline conditions generally, although responses varied by hurricane. When inactive, pelicans tended to seek shelter using local geomorphological features along the coastline such as barrier islands and estuarine systems.
Our telemetry data showed that large subtropical seabirds such as pelicans may mitigate risk associated with spatially-extensive meteorological events by decreasing daily movements. Sheltering may be related to changes in barometric pressure and wind velocity, and represents a strategy common to several other classes of marine vertebrate predators for increasing survival probabilities.
海洋环境中的移动生物预计会根据外部压力源改变其行为。在影响动物移动的环境驱动因素中,有影响生物分布的长期气候指标以及预计会改变急性移动行为的短期气象事件。然而,很少有研究记录沿海和海洋系统中易变物种对气象异常的反应。
在这里,我们研究了南大西洋湾东部褐鹈鹕( )在两年内对三次单独飓风事件的移动反应。使用GPS卫星发射器追踪了来自美国南卡罗来纳州沿海四个殖民地的32只鹈鹕,至少跟踪了一次风暴事件的全过程。使用期望最大化二元聚类算法将鹈鹕的行为状态离散化,这些状态被汇总为“活跃”与“不活跃”状态。使用多项逻辑回归来评估与气压和风速变化相关的行为状态概率。
与一般基线条件相比,在热带气旋过境期间,个体鹈鹕通常更有可能保持不活跃状态,尽管不同飓风的反应有所不同。不活跃时,鹈鹕倾向于利用沿海岸线的当地地貌特征(如障壁岛和河口系统)寻求庇护。
我们的遥测数据表明,像鹈鹕这样的大型亚热带海鸟可能通过减少日常移动来降低与空间广泛的气象事件相关的风险。寻求庇护可能与气压和风速的变化有关,并且是其他几类海洋脊椎动物捕食者增加生存概率的常见策略。