4.7 Article

Black-browed albatrosses foraging on Antarctic krill:: Density-dependence through local enhancement?

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 84, Issue 12, Pages 3265-3275

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/01-4098

Keywords

Allee effect; Antarctic krill; area-restricted search; Black-browed Albatross; density; dependence; Euphausial superba; foraging model; foraging strategy; local enhancement; South Georgia; Thalassarche melanophris

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Many Antarctic seabirds depend on prey that are patchy, cryptic, ephemeral, and unpredictable in location. These predators typically employ two alternative behavioral strategies for locating resource patches: direct visual or olfactory detection, and indirect detection (local enhancement) by sighting other predators that are already exploiting a patch. We developed a model of direct detection and local enhancement in seabirds that predicts how foraging success varies with behavioral strategy, seabird densities, and prey swarm density and detectability. Application of the model to Black-browed Albatrosses foraging for Antarctic krill near South Georgia suggests that local enhancement is generally a highly effective foraging strategy, and that the fraction of time albatrosses spend in feeding flocks should show strong interactions between prey and conspecific densities. To test these predictions, we analyzed survey data collected near South Georgia in January-March 1986. Our analysis suggests a strong Allee-type density dependence in foraging success that was qualitatively and quantitatively consistent with model predictions. This density dependence suggests a potential for destabilizing patterns of resource utilization and reproductive success in Black-browed Albatrosses that may have important implications for conservation of albatrosses and other Antarctic species.

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