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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Fisheries can have profound impacts on the structure and functioning of marine
ecosystems and affect seabird populations. For seabirds, impacts can include
direct mortality in fishing gear, but fisheries also represent an abundant source of
food that may otherwise be inaccessible. Previous studies with seabirds have
revealed the occurrence of individual foraging specializations, and therefore in
scavenging species some individuals may have a higher propensity to feed on
fisheries discharges than the rest of the population. Here we used recently developed
techniques (spatio-temporal match of positions) to detect interactions
between black-browed albatrosses Thalassarche melanophris and fishing vessels,
and also stable isotope analysis of tissues with different turnovers, to investigate
long-term individual specialization in fishery waste products. We combined global
positioning system tracking data from 89 birds with vessel monitoring system data
from the entire fleet operating around the Falklands Islands, in 2009 and 2011.
Interactions with vessels (freezer/factory bottom trawlers) occurred in 15 out of 89
independent albatross trips. Among individuals tracked in both years, those that
associated with fisheries in 2009 were not more likely to do so again in 2011.
Carbon and nitrogen isotopic signatures in whole blood and feathers of albatrosses
that interacted with trawlers were similar to those of individuals that did
not. Also, we found no correlation between feather and blood isotopic ratios of
carbon or nitrogen, indicating no long-term consistency in the isotopic niche of
study birds. These results suggest no specialization of individual albatrosses with
regard to fisheries. Studies of other albatrosses have also failed to show long-term
trophic consistency, which may indicate that scavenging albatrosses, a group
particularly threatened by fisheries activity, do not specialize in discards. Therefore,
any management actions leading to a reduction of discards will be beneficial,
decreasing the numbers of birds behind vessels and consequently the likelihood of
incidental mortality.
Description
Keywords
Discards Falkland Islands GPS Stable isotopes Thalassarche melanophris Vessel Monitoring System (VMS)
Citation
Animal Conservation, 17, 19-26
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell