Breeding biology of Arctic terns (Sterna paradisaea) in the Canadian High Arctic

被引:0
|
作者
Mark L. Mallory
Kelly A. Boadway
S. E. Davis
M. Maftei
Antony W. Diamond
机构
[1] Acadia University,Department of Biology
[2] University of New Brunswick,Atlantic Laboratory for Avian Research
[3] High Arctic Gull Research Group,undefined
来源
Polar Biology | 2017年 / 40卷
关键词
Arctic; Clutch size; Polynya; Predation; Seabird;
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The Arctic tern (Sterna paradisaea) is a well-known polar seabird which breeds around the circumpolar Arctic, and which undertakes the longest known annual migration of any organism. Despite its familiarity, there is little information on its breeding biology in the High Arctic, an important baseline against which future studies of climate change impacts on northern wildlife can be compared. We studied the breeding biology of Arctic terns in the Canadian High Arctic during five field seasons, and compared this to breeding biology of terns from more southern parts of its range. Because our field site was beside a productive polynya, we expected that reproductive metrics for terns nesting there would be relatively high. However, mean clutch size (1.7 eggs), mean egg size (40.2 mm × 29.0 mm), mean nest initiation dates (6 July) were similar to Arctic terns breeding elsewhere. With our data, we could not assess the independent effects of predation pressure, poor weather or low food supplies, but two years with low tern reproduction were also years with low adult body mass and low clutch size (indicating poor food supplies), as well as low hatching success and high nest abandonment (possibly due to high predation pressure).
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页码:1515 / 1525
页数:10
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