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1.
Oecologia ; 201(2): 341-354, 2023 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36746795

RESUMEN

Compared to other animal movements, prospecting by adult individuals for a future breeding site is commonly overlooked. Prospecting influences the decision of where to breed and has consequences on fitness and lifetime reproductive success. By analysing movements of 31 satellite- and GPS-tracked gull and tern populations belonging to 14 species in Europe and North America, we examined the occurrence and factors explaining prospecting by actively breeding birds. Prospecting in active breeders occurred in 85.7% of studied species, across 61.3% of sampled populations. Prospecting was more common in populations with frequent inter-annual changes of breeding sites and among females. These results contradict theoretical models which predict that prospecting is expected to evolve in relatively predictable and stable environments. More long-term tracking studies are needed to identify factors affecting patterns of prospecting in different environments and understand the consequences of prospecting on fitness at the individual and population level.


Asunto(s)
Aves , Charadriiformes , Animales , Femenino , Europa (Continente) , Reproducción , América del Norte
2.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 1014, 2019 01 31.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30705325

RESUMEN

Ongoing global changes apply drastic environmental forcing onto Arctic marine ecosystems, particularly through ocean warming, sea-ice shrinkage and enhanced pollution. To test impacts on arctic marine ecological functioning, we used a 12-year integrative study of little auks (Alle alle), the most abundant seabird in the Atlantic Arctic. We monitored the foraging ecology, reproduction, survival and body condition of breeding birds, and we tested linkages between these biological variables and a set of environmental parameters including sea-ice concentration (SIC) and mercury contamination. Little auks showed substantial plasticity in response to SIC, with deeper and longer dives but less time spent underwater and more time flying when SIC decreased. Their diet also contained less lipid-rich ice-associated prey when SIC decreased. Further, in contrast to former studies conducted at the annual scale, little auk fitness proxies were impacted by environmental changes: Adult body condition and chick growth rate were negatively linked to SIC and mercury contamination. However, no trend was found for adult survival despite high inter-annual variability. Our results suggest that potential benefits of milder climatic conditions in East Greenland may be offset by increasing pollution in the Arctic. Overall, our study stresses the importance of long-term studies integrating ecology and ecotoxicology.

3.
PLoS One ; 9(3): e92520, 2014.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24671108

RESUMEN

We hypothesized that changes in southeastern Bering Sea foraging conditions for black-legged kittiwakes (Rissa tridactyla) have caused shifts in habitat use with direct implications for population trends. To test this, we compared at-sea distribution, breeding performance, and nutritional stress of kittiwakes in three years (2008-2010) at two sites in the Pribilof Islands, where the population has either declined (St. Paul) or remained stable (St. George). Foraging conditions were assessed from changes in (1) bird diets, (2) the biomass and distribution of juvenile pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) in 2008 and 2009, and (3) eddy kinetic energy (EKE; considered to be a proxy for oceanic prey availability). In years when biomass of juvenile pollock was low and patchily distributed in shelf regions, kittiwake diets included little or no neritic prey and a much higher occurrence of oceanic prey (e.g. myctophids). Birds from both islands foraged on the nearby shelves, or made substantially longer-distance trips overnight to the basin. Here, feeding was more nocturnal and crepuscular than on the shelf, and often occurred near anticyclonic, or inside cyclonic eddies. As expected from colony location, birds from St. Paul used neritic waters more frequently, whereas birds from St. George typically foraged in oceanic waters. Despite these distinctive foraging patterns, there were no significant differences between colonies in chick feeding rates or fledging success. High EKE in 2010 coincided with a 63% increase in use of the basin by birds from St. Paul compared with 2008 when EKE was low. Nonetheless, adult nutritional stress, which was relatively high across years at both colonies, peaked in birds from St. Paul in 2010. Diminishing food resources in nearby shelf habitats may have contributed to kittiwake population declines at St Paul, possibly driven by increased adult mortality or breeding desertion due to high foraging effort and nutritional stress.


Asunto(s)
Charadriiformes/fisiología , Conducta Alimentaria , Cadena Alimentaria , Océanos y Mares , Acústica , Alaska , Animales , Biomasa , Cruzamiento , Dieta , Aptitud Genética , Islas , Modelos Lineales , Conducta Predatoria/fisiología , Movimientos del Agua
4.
Oecologia ; 167(1): 49-59, 2011 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21445685

RESUMEN

Tradeoffs between current reproduction and future survival are widely recognized, but may only occur when food is limited: when foraging conditions are favorable, parents may be able to reproduce without compromising their own survival. We investigated these tradeoffs in the little auk (Alle alle), a small seabird with a single-egg clutch. During 2005-2007, we examined the relationship between body mass and survival of birds breeding under contrasting foraging conditions at two Arctic colonies. We used corticosterone levels of breeding adults as a physiological indicator of the foraging conditions they encountered during each reproductive season. We found that when foraging conditions were relatively poor (as reflected in elevated levels of corticosterone), parents ended the reproductive season with low body mass and suffered increased post-breeding mortality. A positive relationship between body mass and post-breeding survival was found in one study year; light birds incurred higher survival costs than heavy birds. The results of this study suggest that reproducing under poor foraging conditions may affect the post-breeding survival of long-lived little auks. They also have important demographic implications because even a small change in adult survival may have a large effect on populations of long-lived species.


Asunto(s)
Peso Corporal , Charadriiformes/fisiología , Ecosistema , Reproducción , Estrés Fisiológico , Animales , Animales Recién Nacidos , Conducta Apetitiva , Corticosterona/sangre , Dieta , Femenino , Groenlandia , Masculino , Desnutrición , Svalbard
5.
Biol Lett ; 6(5): 682-4, 2010 Oct 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20236962

RESUMEN

Copepods are essential components of marine food webs worldwide. In the North Atlantic, they are thought to perform vertical migration and to remain at depths more than 500 m during winter. We challenge this concept through a study of the winter feeding ecology of little auks (Alle alle), a highly abundant planktivorous seabird from the North Atlantic. By combining stable isotope and behavioural analyses, we strongly suggest that swarms of copepods are still available to their predators in water surface layers (less than 50 m) during winter, even during short daylight periods. Using a new bioenergetic model, we estimate that the huge number (20-40 million birds) of little auks wintering off southwest Greenland consume 3600-7200 tonnes of copepods daily, strongly suggesting substantial zooplankton stocks in surface waters of the North Atlantic in the middle of the boreal winter.


Asunto(s)
Aves/fisiología , Ecología , Conducta Alimentaria , Zooplancton/crecimiento & desarrollo , Animales , Océano Atlántico , Copépodos , Estaciones del Año
6.
Ecology ; 88(8): 2024-33, 2007 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17824434

RESUMEN

Flexible time budgets allow individual animals to buffer the effects of variable food availability by allocating more time to foraging when food density decreases. This trait should be especially important for marine predators that forage on patchy and ephemeral food resources. We examined flexible time allocation by a long-lived marine predator, the Common Murre (Uria aalge), using data collected in a five-year study at three colonies in Alaska (USA) with contrasting environmental conditions. Annual hydroacoustic surveys revealed an order-of-magnitude variation in food density among the 15 colony-years of study. We used data on parental time budgets and local prey density to test predictions from two hypotheses: Hypothesis A, the colony attendance of seabirds varies nonlinearly with food density; and Hypothesis B, flexible time allocation of parent murres buffers chicks against variable food availability. Hypothesis A was supported; colony attendance by murres was positively correlated with food over a limited range of poor-to-moderate food densities, but independent of food over a broader range of higher densities. This is the first empirical evidence for a nonlinear response of a marine predator's time budget to changes in prey density. Predictions from Hypothesis B were largely supported: (1) chick-feeding rates were fairly constant over a wide range of densities and only dropped below 3.5 meals per day at the low end of prey density, and (2) there was a nonlinear relationship between chick-feeding rates and time spent at the colony, with chick-feeding rates only declining after time at the colony by the nonbrooding parent was reduced to a minimum. The ability of parents to adjust their foraging time by more than 2 h/d explains why they were able to maintain chick-feeding rates of more than 3.5 meals/d across a 10-fold range in local food density.


Asunto(s)
Conducta Animal , Aves/fisiología , Conducta Competitiva , Eucariontes/fisiología , Abastecimiento de Alimentos , Conducta Predatoria/fisiología , Animales , Ecosistema , Conducta Alimentaria , Cadena Alimentaria , Biología Marina , Dinámicas no Lineales , Densidad de Población , Dinámica Poblacional , Factores de Tiempo
7.
Aust N Z J Public Health ; 30(5): 467-73, 2006 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17073231

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether the 'inverse care law' applies to New South Wales (NSW) hospital admissions--especially to older people with high socio-economic status (SES). DESIGN: Cross-sectional study analysing inequalities in public and private hospital admission rates by SES, defined in terms of age, sex and family income/size at the small geographic area level. SETTING: Admissions to NSW public and private hospitals in 1999-2000 (1.8 million admissions against a NSW population of 6.4 million). METHODOLOGY: Inequalities in hospitalisation rates were expressed as rate ratios across the most and least disadvantaged 20% of the NSW population. RESULTS: Public hospital admission rates for people aged 0-60 years were 24-35% higher for the most disadvantaged 20% of the NSW population than for the least disadvantaged 20%. For 70+ year-olds the direction of this difference was reversed--being 14% lower for the most disadvantaged 20% of the population (5% higher for public patients). For private hospitals this reversal prevailed for all age groups (23-49% lower). For all hospitals it was 16% and 27% lower for 60-69 and 70+ year-olds respectively, with higher admission rates for top SES 60+ year-olds most pronounced for renal dialysis, chemotherapy, colonoscopies and other diagnostic scopes, rehabilitation and follow-up, and cataract operations. CONCLUSION: While the 'inverse care law' did apply to 60+ year-olds, it did not apply either to younger NSW hospital users or to public patients in public hospitals. IMPLICATIONS: Awareness of these SES-level differentials should result in greater equality of access to hospital services, especially by older people.


Asunto(s)
Hospitales Privados/estadística & datos numéricos , Hospitales Públicos/estadística & datos numéricos , Renta , Admisión del Paciente/economía , Clase Social , Revisión de Utilización de Recursos , Adolescente , Adulto , Factores de Edad , Anciano , Niño , Preescolar , Estudios Transversales , Femenino , Accesibilidad a los Servicios de Salud , Humanos , Lactante , Recién Nacido , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Nueva Gales del Sur , Factores Sexuales , Análisis de Área Pequeña , Factores Socioeconómicos
9.
N S W Public Health Bull ; 12(5): 134-136, 2001 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12105597
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