Blinded by the light: Seabird collision events in South Georgia

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Blinded by the light: Seabird collision events in South Georgia. / Coleman, Jamie; Hollyman, Philip R.; Black, Andy et al.
In: Polar Biology, Vol. 45, No. 6, 01.06.2022, p. 1151-1156.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Coleman, J, Hollyman, PR, Black, A & Collins, MA 2022, 'Blinded by the light: Seabird collision events in South Georgia', Polar Biology, vol. 45, no. 6, pp. 1151-1156. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00300-022-03045-0

APA

Coleman, J., Hollyman, P. R., Black, A., & Collins, M. A. (2022). Blinded by the light: Seabird collision events in South Georgia. Polar Biology, 45(6), 1151-1156. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00300-022-03045-0

CBE

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Coleman J, Hollyman PR, Black A, Collins MA. Blinded by the light: Seabird collision events in South Georgia. Polar Biology. 2022 Jun 1;45(6):1151-1156. Epub 2022 May 18. doi: 10.1007/s00300-022-03045-0

Author

Coleman, Jamie ; Hollyman, Philip R. ; Black, Andy et al. / Blinded by the light: Seabird collision events in South Georgia. In: Polar Biology. 2022 ; Vol. 45, No. 6. pp. 1151-1156.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Blinded by the light: Seabird collision events in South Georgia

AU - Coleman, Jamie

AU - Hollyman, Philip R.

AU - Black, Andy

AU - Collins, Martin A.

PY - 2022/6/1

Y1 - 2022/6/1

N2 - Light-induced bird strikes on vessels occur frequently in association with areas of high seabird density, often resulting in bird mortalities. These incidents are poorly understood and likely under-reported by vessels. Here we present the details of four separate bird strike events (899, 206, 50 and 47 birds), which took place whilst vessels (two fishing trawlers and one tourist expedition ship) were navigating along the south coast of South Georgia, and discuss possible contributing factors. All species encountered in these events were burrowing petrel species in the family Procellariidae, with diving-petrel species (Pelecanoides spp.) being most commonly reported. All four events took place during the night in similar meteorological conditions, with poor visibility due to fog, light precipitation and low wind speeds. We identify the waters off the south coast, between King Haakon Bay and Drygalski Fjord, which have remained rat free and are of exceptional importance to breeding seabirds, as high risk for collisions and propose other high-risk areas. The different mortality rates recorded during these events are likely attributed to the varying actions taken by ship crew and persons on board. We propose actions that will help reduce the occurrence of events and mitigate the impact of bird strikes, including the avoidance of high-risk areas in certain night-time conditions. We give recommendations on what to do when birds land on board and stress the importance of reporting of events. Given the expected increase of both fishing and tourist ship activity in South Georgia waters, there is an increasing need to understand and mitigate this threat to seabirds.

AB - Light-induced bird strikes on vessels occur frequently in association with areas of high seabird density, often resulting in bird mortalities. These incidents are poorly understood and likely under-reported by vessels. Here we present the details of four separate bird strike events (899, 206, 50 and 47 birds), which took place whilst vessels (two fishing trawlers and one tourist expedition ship) were navigating along the south coast of South Georgia, and discuss possible contributing factors. All species encountered in these events were burrowing petrel species in the family Procellariidae, with diving-petrel species (Pelecanoides spp.) being most commonly reported. All four events took place during the night in similar meteorological conditions, with poor visibility due to fog, light precipitation and low wind speeds. We identify the waters off the south coast, between King Haakon Bay and Drygalski Fjord, which have remained rat free and are of exceptional importance to breeding seabirds, as high risk for collisions and propose other high-risk areas. The different mortality rates recorded during these events are likely attributed to the varying actions taken by ship crew and persons on board. We propose actions that will help reduce the occurrence of events and mitigate the impact of bird strikes, including the avoidance of high-risk areas in certain night-time conditions. We give recommendations on what to do when birds land on board and stress the importance of reporting of events. Given the expected increase of both fishing and tourist ship activity in South Georgia waters, there is an increasing need to understand and mitigate this threat to seabirds.

KW - Artificial light

KW - Bird-strike

KW - Seabirds

KW - South Georgia

U2 - 10.1007/s00300-022-03045-0

DO - 10.1007/s00300-022-03045-0

M3 - Article

VL - 45

SP - 1151

EP - 1156

JO - Polar Biology

JF - Polar Biology

SN - 0722-4060

IS - 6

ER -