The three-dimensional flight of red-footed boobies: adaptations to foraging in a tropical environment?

Author:

Weimerskirch H.1,Le Corre M.2,Ropert-Coudert Y.3,Kato A.3,Marsac F.1

Affiliation:

1. IRD, Centre de la Réunion, UR 109 ThetisBP 172, 97492 Sainte Clotilde, île de la RéunionFrance

2. Laboratoire d'Écologie Marine, UniversitÉ de la RÉunion15 Avenue RenÉ Cassin, BP 7151, 97715 Saint Denis, Île de la RÉunionFrance

3. National Institute of Polar Research1-9-10 Kaga, Itabashi-ku, Tokyo 173-8515Japan

Abstract

In seabirds a broad variety of morphologies, flight styles and feeding methods exist as an adaptation to optimal foraging in contrasted marine environments for a wide variety of prey types. Because of the low productivity of tropical waters it is expected that specific flight and foraging techniques have been selected there, but very few data are available. By using five different types of high-precision miniaturized logger (global positioning systems, accelerometers, time depth recorders, activity recorders, altimeters) we studied the way a seabird is foraging over tropical waters. Red-footed boobies are foraging in the day, never foraging at night, probably as a result of predation risks. They make extensive use of wind conditions, flying preferentially with crosswinds at median speed of 38 km h �'1 , reaching highest speeds with tail winds. They spent 66% of the foraging trip in flight, using a flap-glide flight, and gliding 68% of the flight. Travelling at low costs was regularly interrupted by extremely active foraging periods where birds are very frequently touching water for landing, plunge diving or surface diving (30 landings h -1 ). Dives were shallow (maximum 2.4 m) but frequent (4.5 dives h -1 ), most being plunge dives. While chasing for very mobile prey like flying fishes, boobies have adopted a very active and specific hunting behaviour, but the use of wind allows them to reduce travelling cost by their extensive use of gliding. During the foraging and travelling phases birds climb regularly to altitudes of 20-50 m to spot prey or congeners. During the final phase of the flight, they climb to high altitudes, up to 500 m, probably to avoid attacks by frigatebirds along the coasts. This study demonstrates the use by boobies of a series of very specific flight and activity patterns that have probably been selected as adaptations to the conditions of tropical waters.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference51 articles.

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3. Seabird Interactions with Dolphins and Tuna in the Eastern Tropical Pacific

4. Flight Energetics of Free-Ranging Red-Footed Boobies (Sula sula)

5. Foraging ecology of tropical seabirds. In Proc. 22nd;Ballance L. T.;Int. Ornithol. Congr., Durban (ed. N. J. Adams & R. H. Slotow),1999

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