Ocean-influenced estuarine habitat buffers high interannual variation in seabird reproductive success

Author:

Seher VL12,Holzman BA23,Hines E24,Bradley RW5,Warzybok P6,Becker BH7

Affiliation:

1. John Muir National Historic Site, Martinez, CA 94553, USA

2. Geography and Environment, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA 94132, USA

3. Santa Barbara Botanic Garden, Santa Barbara, CA 93105, USA

4. Estuary and Ocean Science Center, San Francisco State University, Romberg Tiburon Campus, Tiburon, CA 94920, USA

5. Santa Rosa Island Research Station, CSU Channel Islands, Camarillo, CA 93012, USA

6. Point Blue Conservation Science, Petaluma, CA 94954, USA

7. Californian Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit, National Park Service, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA

Abstract

Seabirds in more variable habitats generally live longer and more readily forgo or reduce breeding investments in poor resource seasons to maximize their overall lifetime fitness. Their breeding success is dependent on factors including diet, prey availability, and proximity to foraging habitat. Furthermore, seabird colonies in upwelling ecosystems are subject to interannual variation in oceanic conditions that drive bottom-up processes. Adjacent estuarine ecosystems, while less affected by upwelling, are also influenced by freshwater input and may experience less interannual variation in seabird prey resources. Here, we compare the breeding ecology and diet of pigeon guillemots Cepphus columba from an estuarine colony (Alcatraz Island, California) and an isolated offshore colony (Southeast Farallon Island, California) from 2015 to 2017 to understand how habitat location and surrounding environment differentially influence diet and reproduction. Breeding phenology in pigeon guillemots was similar between colonies, but reproductive success was higher and more stable at the estuarine site than at the offshore colony, where productivity was explained primarily by ocean conditions. Interannual and estuarine/offshore variability in chick diet composition was partially explained by upwelling and the influence of freshwater inputs. Variation in offshore pigeon guillemot productivity was related to the prey species composition. With increasingly variable conditions offshore in the California Current, the availability of alternative estuarine and nearshore breeding sites inshore may become increasingly important for the regional pigeon guillemot population and other seabirds capable of exploiting nearshore prey resources.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference65 articles.

1. Ainley DG, Boekelheide RJ (1990) Seabirds of the Farallon Islands: ecology, dynamics, and structure of an upwelling-system community. Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA

2. Bakun A (1996) Patterns in the ocean: ocean processes and marine population dynamics. California Sea Grant College System, University of California, La Jolla, CA

3. Temporal and spatial dynamics of ‘trophy’-sized demersal fishes off the California (USA) coast, 1966 to 2013

4. BirdLife International (2021) Species factsheet: Cepphus columba. http://datazone.birdlife.org/species/factsheet/pigeon-guillemot-cepphus-columba

5. Wintertime ocean conditions synchronize rockfish growth and seabird reproduction in the central California Current ecosystem

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