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Divergent foraging strategies during incubation of an unusually wide-ranging seabird, the Murphy's petrel

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Brooke, MDL 

Abstract

Divergent foraging strategies may emerge within a population due to a combination of physiological and environmental factors, yet in order to persist, neither strategy should offer a consistent selective advantage over the alternative in the long term. Murphy’s petrels Pterodroma ultima from Henderson Island (24°20’S, 128°20’W) in the South Pacific Ocean are highly vagile, and exhibit two distinct foraging trip types during incubation; similar proportions of birds undertake either looping trips around the South Pacific Gyre to waters off Peru (hereafter “East”) or trips south-west of the colony towards the Subtropical Front (“South”) (maximum ranges of c. 3,800 or 2,000 km from the colony, respectively). However, the relative benefits of the distinct trip types remain unclear. Through tracking birds with GPS and salt-water immersion loggers in 2015, the fine-scale foraging behaviour was examined for East (trip durations: 14.1 – 19.8 d, maximum ranges: 2,387 – 4,823 km) and South trips (12.9 – 25.8 d, 1,565 – 1,991 km). Data on behaviour classified from GPS tracks, the number of wet bouts per hour (a proxy for landing rates) and wind speeds, were used to distinguish two distinct foraging modes: birds on East trips spent more time in directed movement, whereas those on South trips spent a greater proportion of time in area-restricted search (ARS) behaviour. East trips were associated with higher overall mass gain; and wet bouts occurred in equal proportions during directed movement and ARS behaviour. This suggests that in unproductive marine environments, it may be more profitable to maximise area covered to increase the chances of encountering prey. Analysis of lower-resolution geolocator data (collected from 2011 to 2014) indicated that individuals were largely consistent in trip type between years. Since birds that conducted East trips were 19% lighter on departure from the colony and experienced more frequent tailwinds on foraging trips, we speculate that these birds may benefit from reduced movement costs, whilst also experiencing reduced competition for foraging opportunities.

Description

Keywords

activity patterns, area-restricted search, behavioural consistency, biologging, body mass, expectation maximisation binary clustering (EMbC) algorithm, gadfly petrel, seabirds

Journal Title

Marine Biology

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0025-3162
1432-1793

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer
Sponsorship
The David and Lucile Packard Foundation, Darwin Plus: Overseas Territories Environment and Climate Fund, the Sir Peter Scott Commemorative Expedition to the Pitcairn Islands, generous donors, and the RSPB, the UK partner in Birdlife International, helped to fund our research. Part of the analysis was supported by a studentship to TAC funded as part of NERC Standard Grant NE/J021083/1.