Effect of GPS tagging on behaviour and marine distribution of breeding Arctic Terns Sterna paradisaea

被引:12
作者
Seward, Adam [1 ]
Taylor, Rachel C. [2 ]
Perrow, Martin R. [3 ]
Berridge, Richard J. [3 ]
Bowgen, Katharine M. [2 ]
Dodd, Stephen [1 ]
Johnstone, Ian [1 ]
Bolton, Mark [1 ]
机构
[1] Royal Soc Protect Birds, RSPB Ctr Conservat Sci, Sandy SG19 2DL, Beds, England
[2] British Trust Ornithol, Thetford IP24 2PU, Norfolk, England
[3] ECON Ecol Consultancy Ltd, Unit 7 Octagon Business Pk, Norwich NR13 5FH, Norfolk, England
关键词
negative impacts; seabird; telemetry; tracking; utilization distribution; FORAGING MOVEMENTS; SANDWICH TERNS; LARUS-FUSCUS; WIND FARMS; TRACKING; AREAS; SEA; TRANSMITTERS; METAANALYSIS; ALBATROSSES;
D O I
10.1111/ibi.12849
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
Tracking tags have been used to map the distributions of a wide variety of avian species, but few studies have examined whether the use of these devices has impacts on the study animals that may bias the spatial data obtained. As Global Positioning System (GPS) tags small enough for deployment on terns (family: Laridae) have only recently become available, until now tracking of this group has been conducted by following unmanipulated individuals by boat, which offers a means of comparing distributions obtained from GPS-tracking. We compared the utilization distributions (UDs) of breeding Arctic TernsSterna paradisaeaobtained by GPS-tracking 10 individuals over 2 weeks, with UDs derived from contemporaneous visual boat tracks from 81 individuals. The 50% and 95% UDs of both methods had high similarity scores, indicating good agreement in the density distributions derived from the two methods. The footprints of the UDs of tagged birds were similar to 75-80% larger, which may reflect an effect of tagging on foraging range or the occasional inability to follow by boat individuals which roamed further from the colony. We also compared the nest attendance and chick provisioning rates of adults that were (1) fitted with a GPS tag and leg-flag, (2) handled and marked with a leg-flag but not tagged and (3) fitted with a leg-flag in a previous year but unhandled in the year of the study. There was some evidence that birds fitted with both a GPS tag and leg-flag spent slightly less time at the nest compared with unhandled birds and those fitted with a leg-flag only. Both treatments where birds were fitted with a leg-flag in the year of the study had similarly lower provisioning rates to those of unhandled control birds > 48 h after handling, suggesting that negative effects on provisioning are due to capture and handling or leg-flag attachment rather than to GPS tag attachment/loadingper se. Overall brood-provisioning rate was compensated for by the increased effort by the unhandled partner. Our study suggests that despite slight effects of GPS-tagging on behaviour, the estimates of marine density distribution obtained were very similar to those of unmanipulated birds.
引用
收藏
页码:197 / 212
页数:16
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