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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
In long-lived species with delayed maturity, prebreeders are expected to gather information by visiting
and sampling the quality of potential nesting areas (prospecting), before they choose where to breed. In
most seabirds, this process is important because, once recruited, individuals generally remain sitefaithful
throughout their long reproductive life. As many seabirds are believed to display low levels of
natal dispersal, it is possible that natal philopatry is an obligate strategy for most individuals, with
prospecting being a negligible activity during the prebreeding stage. Using ringing information and GPS
technology, we tracked breeding adults and prebreeder black-browed albatrosses, Thalassarche melanophris,
from a colony of the Falkland Islands, during the breeding season. Breeding adults rarely engaged
in prospecting, whereas prebreeders showed a high propensity to visit other colonies. Most prebreeders
started prospecting ashore when 4e5 years old and most of the younger individuals prospected more
than one breeding colony, with some prospecting up to five colonies in just 9 days. Prospecting activity
did not differ between males and females and rapidly declined as prebreeders aged, by which time
individuals had probably already selected their future nesting site. Nestling body mass at 60 days of age
and hatching date did not influence prospecting behaviour later in life. Prospecting was mostly directed
at colonies within 10 km from the natal place, but occurred regularly up to 55e65 km. While distance
from the natal place was a strong predictor of the probability of a colony being prospected, colony size
and growth rate were not. Our results provide new insights into the role of prospecting in the process of
recruitment, showing that even for highly philopatric birds, recruitment to the natal colony (or to
another nesting site) has the potential to be informed, not done blindly.
Description
Keywords
Dispersal GPS tracking Philopatry Prebreeder Prospecting behaviour Seabirds
Citation
Animal Behaviour, 128, 85-93
Publisher
Elsevier