Surf Scoters use deeper offshore waters during nocturnal resting periods in the Salish Sea of Washington and British Columbia

Author:

Hamilton Lindsey J12ORCID,Michel Nicole L3,Evenson Joseph R4,Roberts Dina L15

Affiliation:

1. Program on the Environment, The Evergreen State College , Olympia, Washington , USA

2. USDA Agricultural Research Service , Hilo, Hawaii , USA

3. National Audubon Society , New York, New York , USA

4. Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife , Olympia, Washington , USA

5. Wildlands Studies , Aptos, California , USA

Abstract

Abstract Diurnally biased monitoring and research dominate our ecological understanding and guide conservation and management decisions regarding important indicator sea duck species, such as Surf Scoters (Melanitta perspicillata). Advances in telemetry technology are improving our ability to track wildlife across the entire 24-hr day. Using location data derived from birds with surgically implanted satellite transmitters and habitat layers within a GIS (geographic information system), we analyzed Surf Scoter location data to (1) estimate movement distances between diurnal and nocturnal sites, (2) assess differences in environmental conditions at diurnal and nocturnal use locations, (3) evaluate the environmental conditions influencing nocturnal habitat selection, and (4) develop a predictive model to estimate likely nocturnal resting areas across the Salish Sea, which is composed of the inland marine waters of British Columbia, Canada, and Washington State. Surf Scoters in the Salish Sea traveled an average of 4,287 m between diurnal and nocturnal habitats, but distances varied regionally. We found that distance to shore, water depth, tidal current, and vessel traffic influenced nocturnal habitat use. Surf Scoter nocturnal use sites were characterized by greater distances from shore and deeper water than diurnal locations, although scoters avoided areas with strong tidal currents and heavy shipping traffic at night. The Salish Sea is experiencing increased ship traffic from multiple U.S. and Canadian ports. Oil tanker and shipping container vessel traffic pose a potential threat to nocturnal scoter flocks aggregating in deeper water adjacent to and sometimes overlapping with shipping lanes in narrow, glacial-carved channels of the Salish Sea. Current oil spill response plans in Washington State waters utilize diurnal distribution data, lacking important nocturnal use data. Our findings provide critical nocturnal habitat use information that can improve oil spill response policy and highlight the importance of elucidating nocturnal ecology for marine vertebrate species.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

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

Reference49 articles.

1. Surf Scoter (Melanitta perspicillata), version 1.0.;Anderson,2020

2. Predation rates, timing, and predator composition for Scoters (Melanitta spp.) in marine habitats;Anderson;Canadian Journal of Zoology,2012

3. R package version 1.43.17;Barton,2020

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