Seabird Migration Strategies: Flight Budgets, Diel Activity Patterns, and Lunar Influence
Authors
Bonnet-Lebrun, AS
Dias, MP
Phillips, RA
Granadeiro, JP
Brooke, MDL
Chastel, O
Clay, TA
Fayet, AL
Gilg, O
González-Solís, J
Guilford, T
Hanssen, SA
Hedd, A
Jaeger, A
Krietsch, J
Lang, J
Le Corre, M
Militão, T
Moe, B
Montevecchi, WA
Peter, HU
Pinet, P
Rayner, MJ
Reid, T
Reyes-González, JM
Ryan, PG
Sagar, PM
Schmidt, NM
Thompson, DR
van Bemmelen, R
Watanuki, Y
Weimerskirch, H
Yamamoto, T
Catry, P
Publication Date
2021Journal Title
Frontiers in Marine Science
ISSN
2296-7745
Publisher
Frontiers Media SA
Volume
8
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Bonnet-Lebrun, A., Dias, M., Phillips, R., Granadeiro, J., Brooke, M., Chastel, O., Clay, T., et al. (2021). Seabird Migration Strategies: Flight Budgets, Diel Activity Patterns, and Lunar Influence. Frontiers in Marine Science, 8 https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.683071
Abstract
<jats:p>Every year, billions of birds undertake extensive migrations between breeding and non-breeding areas, facing challenges that require behavioural adjustments, particularly to flight timing and duration. Such adjustments in daily activity patterns and the influence of extrinsic factors (e.g., environmental conditions, moonlight) have received much more research attention in terrestrial than marine migrants. Taking advantage of the widespread deployment in recent decades of combined light-level geolocator-immersion loggers, we investigated diel organisation and influence of the moon on flight activities during the non-breeding season of 21 migrant seabird species from a wide taxonomic range (6 families, 3 orders). Migrant seabirds regularly stopped (to either feed or rest) during migration, unlike some terrestrial and wetland birds which fly non-stop. We found an overall increase for most seabird species in time in flight and, for several species, also in flight bout duration, during migration compared to when resident at the non-breeding grounds. Additionally, several nocturnal species spent more of the day in flight during migration than at non-breeding areas, and vice versa for diurnal species. Nocturnal time in flight tended to increase during full moon, both during migration and at the non-breeding grounds, depending on species. Our study provides an extensive overview of activity patterns of migrant seabirds, paving the way for further research on the underlying mechanisms and drivers.</jats:p>
Keywords
bird migration, ecological barriers, nocturnality, migratory behaviour, moon phases, transequatorial migrants
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.683071
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/330766
Rights
Licence:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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