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Consistent foraging areas and commuting corridors of the critically endangered Balearic shearwater Puffinus mauretanicus in the northwestern Mediterranean

Consistent foraging areas and commuting corridors of the critically endangered Balearic shearwater Puffinus mauretanicus in the northwestern Mediterranean
Consistent foraging areas and commuting corridors of the critically endangered Balearic shearwater Puffinus mauretanicus in the northwestern Mediterranean
Unprecedented changes to the marine environment and growth of bio-logging science make detailed study of the movement ecology of threatened marine species timely. Here, we study spatial and temporal patterns of marine space use by a critically endangered seabird: the Balearic shearwater Puffinus mauretanicus. Using a suite of bio-logging systems, 67 foraging trips were recorded during incubation periods between 2011 and 2014 from one of the species’ largest colonies (Sa Cella, Mallorca). Most birds followed narrow flight corridors to restricted neritic foraging grounds on the Iberian continental shelf. Productive foraging areas along the Catalan coast (NE Spain) were consistent across multiple years and between sexes, indicating extensive use of predictable resources. While our study emphasises the vulnerability of this species to anthropogenic activity in nearshore waters, consistent commuting corridors and foraging grounds represent tractable habitat for protection and offer hope for developing area-based management approaches. Preferred foraging areas showed strong overlap with recently declared Special Protection Areas, strengthening the evidence base for targeted management at these sites.
Foraging behaviour, Bio-logging, Seabird conservation, Natura 2000, Marine protected areas, Mediterranean Sea
0006-3207
87-97
Meier, Rhiannon
987cfb29-5162-484d-b33c-3cb891cd9b68
Wynn, Russell B.
72ccd765-9240-45f8-9951-4552b497475a
Votier, Stephen C.
b3f149e2-0fa4-4ca3-a2ae-6f3151295af3
McMinn Grivé, Miguel
1335bc70-d244-4796-ba69-bc7d3cc7fddf
Rodríguez, Ana
89d6f61e-13d7-4f8a-8a4e-2f054d0c572f
Maurice, Louise
e5f0825d-3e5e-4ff3-81a1-2426df513866
van Loon, E. Emiel
7f3bfe87-f86f-4de0-8ab7-e60a9ec12f65
Jones, Alice R.
d9fc80ef-ed3f-4120-a4a4-d20640d82bbc
Suberg, Lavinia
4b772af2-4b34-45d4-866a-fb934376e1cd
Arcos, José Manuel
4ed44cd1-239f-4079-86f6-071b79cd6a95
Morgan, Greg
037aa31c-0fbb-44b4-b270-3d36410a770e
Josey, Simon A.
2252ab7f-5cd2-49fd-a951-aece44553d93
Guilford, Tim
6f814dc8-b32a-4dab-9ff2-785e82395657
Meier, Rhiannon
987cfb29-5162-484d-b33c-3cb891cd9b68
Wynn, Russell B.
72ccd765-9240-45f8-9951-4552b497475a
Votier, Stephen C.
b3f149e2-0fa4-4ca3-a2ae-6f3151295af3
McMinn Grivé, Miguel
1335bc70-d244-4796-ba69-bc7d3cc7fddf
Rodríguez, Ana
89d6f61e-13d7-4f8a-8a4e-2f054d0c572f
Maurice, Louise
e5f0825d-3e5e-4ff3-81a1-2426df513866
van Loon, E. Emiel
7f3bfe87-f86f-4de0-8ab7-e60a9ec12f65
Jones, Alice R.
d9fc80ef-ed3f-4120-a4a4-d20640d82bbc
Suberg, Lavinia
4b772af2-4b34-45d4-866a-fb934376e1cd
Arcos, José Manuel
4ed44cd1-239f-4079-86f6-071b79cd6a95
Morgan, Greg
037aa31c-0fbb-44b4-b270-3d36410a770e
Josey, Simon A.
2252ab7f-5cd2-49fd-a951-aece44553d93
Guilford, Tim
6f814dc8-b32a-4dab-9ff2-785e82395657

Meier, Rhiannon, Wynn, Russell B., Votier, Stephen C., McMinn Grivé, Miguel, Rodríguez, Ana, Maurice, Louise, van Loon, E. Emiel, Jones, Alice R., Suberg, Lavinia, Arcos, José Manuel, Morgan, Greg, Josey, Simon A. and Guilford, Tim (2015) Consistent foraging areas and commuting corridors of the critically endangered Balearic shearwater Puffinus mauretanicus in the northwestern Mediterranean. Biological Conservation, 190, 87-97. (doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2015.05.012).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Unprecedented changes to the marine environment and growth of bio-logging science make detailed study of the movement ecology of threatened marine species timely. Here, we study spatial and temporal patterns of marine space use by a critically endangered seabird: the Balearic shearwater Puffinus mauretanicus. Using a suite of bio-logging systems, 67 foraging trips were recorded during incubation periods between 2011 and 2014 from one of the species’ largest colonies (Sa Cella, Mallorca). Most birds followed narrow flight corridors to restricted neritic foraging grounds on the Iberian continental shelf. Productive foraging areas along the Catalan coast (NE Spain) were consistent across multiple years and between sexes, indicating extensive use of predictable resources. While our study emphasises the vulnerability of this species to anthropogenic activity in nearshore waters, consistent commuting corridors and foraging grounds represent tractable habitat for protection and offer hope for developing area-based management approaches. Preferred foraging areas showed strong overlap with recently declared Special Protection Areas, strengthening the evidence base for targeted management at these sites.

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Accepted/In Press date: May 2015
Published date: October 2015
Keywords: Foraging behaviour, Bio-logging, Seabird conservation, Natura 2000, Marine protected areas, Mediterranean Sea
Organisations: Marine Systems Modelling, Geology & Geophysics, Marine Geoscience

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 377516
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/377516
ISSN: 0006-3207
PURE UUID: f563b6f7-b45f-4aeb-8bbe-111ace588b07

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Date deposited: 28 May 2015 09:41
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 20:05

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Contributors

Author: Rhiannon Meier
Author: Russell B. Wynn
Author: Stephen C. Votier
Author: Miguel McMinn Grivé
Author: Ana Rodríguez
Author: Louise Maurice
Author: E. Emiel van Loon
Author: Alice R. Jones
Author: Lavinia Suberg
Author: José Manuel Arcos
Author: Greg Morgan
Author: Simon A. Josey
Author: Tim Guilford

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