4.2 Article

Spatiotemporal habitat use by breeding sooty shearwaters Puffinus griseus

Journal

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
Volume 391, Issue -, Pages 209-220

Publisher

INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/meps07932

Keywords

Activity; Archival data logger; Diving; Geolocation; Puffinus griseus; Tracking; Sea surface temperature; Sooty shearwater

Funding

  1. Tagging of Pacific Pelagics (TOPP) program
  2. Moore Foundation
  3. UCSC
  4. National Ocean Partnership Program [N00014-02-1-1012]
  5. Office of Naval Research [N00014-00-1-0880, N00014-03-t-0651]

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Breeding sooty shearwaters Puffin us griseus cycle between long (11 to 14 d) and short (1 to 2 d) foraging bouts at sea, but no information exists on bird behavior during these trips. We tested the hypothesis that shearwaters use these long trips to travel to distant Antarctic waters compared to remaining in local waters. Patterns of habitat use of 28 breeding sooty shearwaters were studied using 6 g archival data loggers that recorded location, environmental temperature, and diving behavior. Dive activity was compared to remotely-sensed environmental data to characterize the habitats visited by shearwaters on long and short trips. Sooty shearwaters traveled predominantly (70% of all long trips) to cold oceanic waters along the Polar Front (mean +/- SD, 1970 +/- 930 km from colony) on long trips or remained within warmer neritic waters of the New Zealand shelf (515 +/- 248 km from colony) on short trips. Diving depths (mean depth 15.9 +/- 10.8 m, max depth 69.9 m, n = 2007 dives) were not significantly different between excursion types. Activity patterns suggest that shearwaters commuted between distant foraging grounds (e.g. Polar Front) and the breeding colony and that more than 95% of diving activity occurred during daylight hours. Although shearwaters traveled primarily to Antarctic waters on long trips, occasional trips around New Zealand waters were observed; all but 2 birds were from the northern-most study colony. Oceanic habitats in Antarctic waters were substantially different from neritic habitats around New Zealand, indicating that shearwaters experience dramatically different environmental conditions associated with each excursion type. The ability of sooty shearwaters to use 2 vastly different habitats provides greater flexibility for maximizing resource acquisition during breeding and reduces competition near the colony.

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