Journal
POLAR BIOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 3, Pages 421-429Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00300-010-0897-6
Keywords
Pachyptila; Attendance patterns; Predation; Burrow activity; Vegetation cover
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Funding
- Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia [BD/9356/96, BPD/22276/05]
- Albatroz [PTDC/MAR/099366/2008]
- New Island Conservation Trust
- Falkland Islands Government
- Wildlife Conservation Society
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Predation is a major ecological and evolutionary driver of natural populations, greatly influencing fitness and behaviour of prey species. Small, long-lived petrels are vulnerable to predation at the breeding colonies and are expected to evolve behavioural strategies to minimize predation risks. Using an automatic nest monitoring system and nightly aerial counts, we examined the effect of vegetation cover and moonlight on colony attendance patterns and levels of burrow activity of breeding thin-billed prions, Pachyptila belcheri, on New Island, Falkland Islands. We further investigated how these parameters were related to predation by Falkland skuas. We monitored up to 32 nests in two habitats, one with Tussock grass and one with low vegetation cover. Individuals in both areas were more active at the nest before hatching, and those breeding in the low cover habitat were more active and arrived at the colony earlier, which might reflect an effect of reaction time over predation risk. Nocturnal activity peaks shifted in time as the season progressed, indicating behavioural adjustments to sunrise hours. Moon phase did not affect attendance and activity levels of breeders in either habitat or overall aerial activity, but influenced arrival time at the colony during chick-rearing, individuals arriving later in periods of full moon. Skua capture rates were positively correlated with aerial and nest activity but not with overall breeder attendance and were unaffected by moon phase. Thin-billed prions activity budgets are influenced by environmental parameters that affect their likelihood of being predated.
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