海鸟表现出对觅食地点和路线的忠诚,但也表现出对当地信息的灵活反应。

IF 3.4 1区 生物学 Q2 ECOLOGY Movement Ecology Pub Date : 2024-06-13 DOI:10.1186/s40462-024-00467-9
Charlotte E Regan, Maria I Bogdanova, Mark Newell, Carrie Gunn, Sarah Wanless, Mike P Harris, Samuel Langlois Lopez, Ella Benninghaus, Mark Bolton, Francis Daunt, Kate R Searle
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在环境条件可预测的情况下,忠于特定的觅食地点或路线可能是有益的,但如果环境条件恶化或变得不可预测,则会付出高昂的代价。因此,了解不同物种表现出的忠实性的程度以及驱动或侵蚀忠实性的过程,对于了解忠实性如何影响人为变化的人口后果至关重要。特别是,了解个体可能用来调整其忠诚度的信息,将有助于更好地预测随着环境的变化,忠诚度可能会发生怎样的变化,以及忠诚度在多大程度上会使个体免受这种变化的影响:我们利用在苏格兰五月岛繁殖的海鸠、大西洋海鹦、蛏子和黑脚海雀的繁殖季节期间收集到的八年运动数据,以了解(1)觅食地点/路线的忠实性是否发生在年内和年际之间;(2)个人觅食努力程度是否可预测不同行程之间的忠实程度;(3)不同个体在出发前和/或出海前在觅食地的时间是否重叠,从而表明它们使用了相同的当地环境线索或同种和异种个体的决策信息。结果所有物种在年内和年际间都表现出对地点和路线的忠实性,海鸠和矶鹞在不同航次之间的忠实性与觅食努力程度相关,这表明它们会根据个人觅食经验调整忠实性。我们还发现,有证据表明,个体在选择觅食路线时,会利用当地环境中有关猎物位置或可获得性的线索和/或通过观察同类获得的信息,尤其是在海雀中,在群落或海上时间上重叠的个体的觅食行程更为相似:这些海鸟物种所表现出的忠实性有可能使它们在面对环境变化时面临更大的风险,因为这会促使个体继续使用因人为压力而退化的区域。然而,我们的研究结果表明,个体的忠实性表现出一定的灵活性,这可能会提高它们在环境变化中的适应能力。这种灵活性的益处可能取决于许多因素,包括环境变化的速度和空间范围,以及个体用来选择觅食地点或路线的信息的可靠性,因此需要更好地了解生物如何结合线索、先前的经验和其他信息来源来做出移动决策。
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Seabirds show foraging site and route fidelity but demonstrate flexibility in response to local information.

Background: Fidelity to a given foraging location or route may be beneficial when environmental conditions are predictable but costly if conditions deteriorate or become unpredictable. Understanding the magnitude of fidelity displayed by different species and the processes that drive or erode it is therefore vital for understanding how fidelity may shape the demographic consequences of anthropogenic change. In particular, understanding the information that individuals may use to adjust their fidelity will facilitate improved predictions of how fidelity may change as environments change and the extent to which it will buffer individuals against such changes.

Methods: We used movement data collected during the breeding season across eight years for common guillemots, Atlantic puffins, razorbills, and black-legged kittiwakes breeding on the Isle of May, Scotland to understand: (1) whether foraging site/route fidelity occurred within and between years, (2) whether the degree of fidelity between trips was predicted by personal foraging effort, and (3) whether different individuals made more similar trips when they overlapped in time at the colony prior to departure and/or when out at sea suggesting the use of the same local environmental cues or information on the decisions made by con- and heterospecifics.

Results: All species exhibited site and route fidelity both within- and between-years, and fidelity between trips in guillemots and razorbills was related to metrics of foraging effort, suggesting they adjust fidelity to their personal foraging experience. We also found evidence that individuals used local environmental cues of prey location or availability and/or information gained by observing conspecifics when choosing foraging routes, particularly in puffins, where trips of individuals that overlapped temporally at the colony or out at sea were more similar.

Conclusions: The fidelity shown by these seabird species has the potential to put them at greater risk in the face of environmental change by driving individuals to continue using areas being degraded by anthropogenic pressures. However, our results suggest that individuals show some flexibility in their fidelity, which may promote resilience under environmental change. The benefits of this flexibility are likely to depend on numerous factors, including the rapidity and spatial scale of environmental change and the reliability of the information individuals use to choose foraging sites or routes, thus highlighting the need to better understand how organisms combine cues, prior experience, and other sources of information to make movement decisions.

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来源期刊
Movement Ecology
Movement Ecology Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
4.90%
发文量
47
审稿时长
23 weeks
期刊介绍: Movement Ecology is an open-access interdisciplinary journal publishing novel insights from empirical and theoretical approaches into the ecology of movement of the whole organism - either animals, plants or microorganisms - as the central theme. We welcome manuscripts on any taxa and any movement phenomena (e.g. foraging, dispersal and seasonal migration) addressing important research questions on the patterns, mechanisms, causes and consequences of organismal movement. Manuscripts will be rigorously peer-reviewed to ensure novelty and high quality.
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