4.7 Article

Habitat Selection and Specialisation of Herring Gulls During the Non-breeding Season

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2022.816881

Keywords

biologging; habitat specialism; spatial specialisation; resource selection function; home range; Laridae; utilisation distribution

Funding

  1. European Union's INTERREG IVA Programme [2859]
  2. Natural Environment Research Council
  3. Department for Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs [NE/L003090/1]
  4. Department for Business, Energy, and Industrial Strategy, BEIS

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Understanding the distribution and habitat use of species throughout the annual cycle is crucial to understanding their vulnerability to environmental change. In this study, we investigated the migratory strategies and non-breeding habitat selection of a declining seabird species, the European herring gull. We found that herring gulls displayed a generalist use of non-breeding habitats at the population level, but individual birds showed some habitat specialisation. The results emphasize the importance of intertidal habitat and a mix of alternative foraging habitats for herring gulls during the non-breeding season.
Understanding both the distribution and habitat use of populations through the annual cycle is vital to understanding how vulnerable species are to environmental change. However, distributions and habitat use can vary among individuals and populations, particularly in generalist species, with variation depending on external environmental factors, such as resource availability. Comprehensive information across multiple populations is important to guide spatial planning of protected areas and is increasingly available for breeding individuals, but it is still lacking for many species, particularly seabirds, during the non-breeding season, especially those with declining populations. We investigated within-species variation in migratory strategies, non-breeding habitat selection and habitat and spatial specialisation in a declining, opportunistic, generalist seabird, the European herring gull Larus argentatus, from multiple breeding colonies across northwest England and southwest Scotland using global positioning system (GPS) tracking during the non-breeding season of 2014/15. Although several individuals stayed within the area of the breeding colony, the majority of individuals migrated in a southerly direction and spent half of the annual cycle (on average 53%) away from the breeding area and kept moving through the non-breeding period. During non-breeding, herring gulls selected mainly marine intertidal, but also a range of anthropogenic terrestrial habitats. However, habitat selection differed between geographical regions, within a geographical region and among individuals. There was a generalist use of non-breeding habitats at the population level, but some habitat specialisation at the individual level that was repeatable through the non-breeding period despite individuals showing low spatial specialisation. The results highlight the importance of intertidal habitat and a mix of alternative foraging habitats in the wintering areas of herring gulls. The results also highlight that habitat selection in an opportunistic generalist can vary even between nearby regions and that appropriate conservation management plans may need to be tailored to regional differences in specific non-breeding areas.

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