Biology Department, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA, USA.
Department of Physical Oceanography, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA, USA; Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Geomar Helmholtz-Center for Ocean Research, Kiel, Germany.
Curr Biol. 2024 Jul 22;34(14):3279-3285.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2024.06.022. Epub 2024 Jul 9.
In late summer and autumn, the passage of intense tropical cyclones can profoundly perturb oceanic and coastal ecosystems. Direct negative effects on individuals and marine communities can be dramatic, especially in the coastal zone, but cyclones can also enhance pelagic primary and secondary production. However, cyclone impacts on open ocean marine life remain poorly understood. Here, we investigate their effects on the foraging movements of a wide-ranging higher predator, the Desertas petrel (Pterodroma deserta), in the mid-latitude North Atlantic during hurricane season. Contrary to previously studied pelagic seabirds in tropical and mid-latitude regions, Desertas petrels did not avoid cyclones by altering course, nor did they seek calmer conditions within the cyclone eye. Approximately one-third of petrels tracked from their breeding colony interacted with approaching cyclones. Upon encountering strong winds, the birds reduced ground speed, likely by spending less time in flight. A quarter of birds followed cyclone wakes for days and over thousands of kilometers, a behavior documented here for the first time. Within these wakes, tailwind support was higher than along alternative routes. Furthermore, at the mesoscale (hours-weeks and hundreds of kilometers), sea surface temperature dropped and surface chlorophyll sharply increased, suggesting direct effects on ocean stratification, primary production, and therefore presumably prey abundance and accessibility for surface-feeding petrels. We therefore hypothesize that cyclone wakes provide both predictably favorable wind conditions and foraging opportunities. As such, cyclones may have positive net effects on the demography of many mid-latitude pelagic seabirds and, likely, other marine top-predators.
在夏末和秋季,强烈的热带气旋的过境会深刻地扰乱海洋和沿海生态系统。对个体和海洋生物群落的直接负面影响可能是巨大的,特别是在沿海地区,但气旋也可以增强浮游生物的初级和次级生产力。然而,气旋对开阔海洋海洋生物的影响仍知之甚少。在这里,我们调查了它们对中纬度北大西洋飓风季节中广泛分布的高级捕食者——德斯塔德斯海燕(Pterodroma deserta)觅食活动的影响。与之前在热带和中纬度地区研究的海洋鸟类不同,德斯塔德斯海燕并没有通过改变航线来避开气旋,也没有在气旋眼内寻找更平静的条件。大约三分之一从繁殖地跟踪的海燕与即将到来的气旋相互作用。当遇到强风时,鸟类会降低地面速度,可能是通过减少飞行时间。四分之一的鸟类会跟随气旋尾流数天甚至数千公里,这是这里首次记录到的行为。在这些尾流中,顺风支持比沿其他路线更高。此外,在中尺度(数小时-数周和数百公里)上,海面温度下降,海面叶绿素急剧增加,这表明对海洋分层、初级生产力有直接影响,因此可能对表面觅食的海燕的猎物丰度和可及性产生影响。因此,我们假设气旋尾流既提供了可预测的有利风况,也提供了觅食机会。因此,气旋可能对许多中纬度海洋海鸟以及可能的其他海洋顶级捕食者的种群动态产生积极的净影响。