4.7 Article

Predicting the distribution of foraging seabirds during a period of heightened environmental variability

Journal

ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
Volume 31, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eap.2343

Keywords

boosted regression trees; fish; warm event; hot spot; marine heatwave; predator; prey; species‐ distribution modeling; trophic interactions; zooplankton

Funding

  1. Rescue Foundation Inc. [SWR/8/2015]
  2. Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment
  3. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (University of Tasmania)

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By quantifying the impact of marine heatwave events on prey occurrence and biomass, this study examined the factors influencing seabird distribution and foraging behavior. Factors such as sea-surface temperature, current speed, mixed-layer depth, and bathymetry were found to play crucial roles in structuring both prey and seabird distribution. High-use coastal areas require careful management to balance human activities with the needs of marine predators, especially seabirds.
Quantifying the links between the marine environment, prey occurrence, and predator distribution is the first step towards identifying areas of biological importance for marine spatial planning. Events such as marine heatwaves result in an anomalous change in the physical environment, which can lead to shifts in the structure, biomass, and distribution of lower trophic levels. As central-place foragers, seabirds are vulnerable to changes in their foraging grounds during the breeding season. We first quantified spatiotemporal variability in the occurrence and biomass of prey in response to an abrupt change in oceanography as a result of a marine heatwave event. Secondly, using multivariate techniques and machine learning, we investigated if differences in the foraging technique and prey of seabirds resulted in varying responses to changes in prey occurrence and the environment over a 2.5-yr period. We found that the main variables correlated with seabird distribution were also important in structuring the occurrence and biomass of prey; sea-surface temperature (SST), current speed, mixed-layer depth, and bathymetry. Both zooplankton biomass and the occurrence of fish schools exhibited negative relationships with temperature, and temperature was subsequently an important variable in determining seabird distribution. We were able to establish correlations between the distribution of prey and the spatiotemporal distribution of albatross, little penguins and common-diving petrels. We were unable to find a correlation between the distribution of prey and that of short-tailed shearwaters and fairy prions. For high-use coastal areas, the delineation of important foraging regions is essential to balance human use of an area with the needs of marine predators, particularly seabirds.

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