Assessing the importance of individual‐ and colony‐level variation when using seabird foraging ranges as impact assessment and conservation tools

Author:

Cleasby Ian R.1ORCID,Owen Ellie12,Butler Adam3,Baer Julia4,Blackburn Jez5,Bogdanova Maria I.6,Coledale Tessa7,Daunt Francis6,Dodd Stephen8,Evans Julian C.9,Green Jonathan A.10,Guilford Tim11,Harris Michael P.7ORCID,Hughes Robert1,Newell Mark A.7,Newton Stephen F.12,Robertson Gail S.3,Ruffino Lise13,Shoji Akiko14,Soanes Louise M.15,Votier Stephen C.16,Wakefield Ewan D.17,Wanless Sarah7,Wilson Linda J.1,Bolton Mark8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. RSPB Centre for Conservation Science Etive House Inverness IV2 3BW UK

2. National Trust for Scotland Balnain House, 40 Huntly Street Inverness IV3 5HR UK

3. Bioinformatics and Statistics Scotland James Clerk Maxwell Building, Peter Guthrie Tait Road Edinburgh EH9 3FD UK

4. BioConsult SH Schobüller Strasse 36 25813 Husum Germany

5. British Trust for Ornithology The Nunnery, Thetford Norfolk IP24 2PU UK

6. UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology Edinburgh Bush Estate, Penicuik Midlothian EH26 0QB UK

7. RSPB Centre for Conservation Science 2 Lochside View Edinburgh EH12 9DH UK

8. RSPB Centre for Conservation Science The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds The Lodge, Sandy Bedfordshire SG19 2DL UK

9. Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies University of Zurich 8 Winterthurerstrasse 190 8057 Zurich Switzerland

10. School of Environmental Sciences University of Liverpool Liverpool L69 3GP UK

11. Department of Zoology University of Oxford 11a Mansfield Road Oxford OX1 3SZ UK

12. BirdWatch Ireland 20D Bullford Business Campus Kilcoole, County Wicklow Ireland

13. Joint Nature Conservation Committee Inverdee House Baxter Street Aberdeen AB11 9QA UK

14. Faculty of Life and Environmental Sciences University of Tsukuba Tsukuba 305‐8572 Japan

15. University of Roehampton Roehampton London SW15 4JD UK

16. Lyell Centre Heriot‐Watt University Edinburgh EH14 4BA UK

17. Department of Geography Durham University Lower Mountjoy, South Road Durham DH1 3LE UK

Abstract

Knowledge of seabird distributions plays a key role in seabird conservation and sustainable marine management, underpinning efforts to designate protected areas or assess the impact of human developments. Technological advances in animal tracking devices increasingly allow researchers to acquire information on the movement of birds from specific colonies. Nevertheless, most seabird colonies have not been subject to such tracking and another means must be found to assess their likely foraging distribution. Consequently, foraging range data collated and summarized across other tracking studies has often been used to estimate species‐level foraging distances for use within applied settings. However, generic species‐specific foraging ranges must be used with caution because of the amount of variation in seabird foraging behaviour at both the individual and colony levels. Specifically, although current reviews of seabird foraging ranges provide summary estimates of maximum foraging range, they typically do not assess the extent of among‐colony or among‐individual variation around such estimates. To address this, we conducted a variance component analysis of the maximum distance reached from the breeding colony per foraging trip (foraging range) using multi‐colony tracking datasets to estimate the degree of between‐individual, between‐year and between‐colony variation in foraging range in four UK breeding seabirds (Black‐legged Kittiwake Rissa tridactyla, Common Guillemot Uria aalge, Razorbill Alca torda and European Shag Gulosus aristotelis). We also provide updated estimates of typical foraging ranges for each species and quantify the influence of breeding stage and colony size. Overall, between‐colony variation was typically the largest variance component, explaining 20–30% of the observed variation in foraging range across the four species. Individual‐level variation was also relatively large among Shag. In Kittiwake, Guillemot and Shag, but not Razorbill, average foraging ranges were positively associated with colony size. In addition, Kittiwake and Razorbill travelled further during incubation than during chick‐rearing. More generally, our estimates of mean foraging ranges for each species were subject to a high degree of uncertainty, which should be incorporated into impact assessments carried out using such data.

Funder

Environment Wales

European Regional Development Fund

Natural England

Natural Resources Wales

Scottish Natural Heritage

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference95 articles.

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