Name: | Description: | Size: | Format: | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1.65 MB | Adobe PDF |
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Aim: Apical pelagic species forage in predictable habitats, and their movements
should signal biologically and ecologically significant areas of the marine ecosystem.
Several countries are now engaged in identifying these areas based on animal
tracking, but this is often limited to a few individuals from one breeding population,
which may result in biased portrayals of the key marine habitats. To help
identify such foraging areas, we compiled tracking data of a marine top predator
from the main breeding colonies in the Central Macaronesia.
Location: North-east Atlantic Ocean.
Methods: Over seven years, we tracked the foraging movements of Cory’s shearwaters
(Calonectris borealis) from several populations during the chick-rearing
period using global positioning system and platform terminal transmitter devices.
Results: We obtained foraging trips from 174 shearwaters breeding on six
important colonies representative of the range occupied in the Macaronesian
Archipelagos of Madeira, Salvages and Canaries. Our results show that birds
orient and move rapidly towards the closest neritic waters over the African
continental shelf. Birds from different colonies show substantial spatial segregation
in their foraging grounds but consistently overlap in some specific foraging
areas along the Canary Current characterized by high productivity. By weighting
the use of foraging grounds according to the size of each study population,
we inferred the overall exploitation of such areas.
Main: conclusions Our meta-population approach provides a more comprehensive
picture of space use from both perspectives: the studied species and the
Canary Current system. Foraging grounds consistently used by several populations
may not be adequately identified by tracking a single population, and
therefore, multiple population tracking studies are needed to properly delineate
key conservation areas and inform conservation planning in the marine ecosystem.
Finally, we highlight the long-term stability and sustainability of identified
foraging areas and propose that countries with geographical jurisdictions over
the Canary Current area should work towards multilateral agreements to set
management plans for this key marine ecosystem.
Description
Keywords
Biologging Calonectris borealis Canary current Meta-population feeding grounds Seabird at-sea distribution Tracking top predators
Citation
Diversity and Distributions, 19, 1284-1298