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COVID-related anthropause highlights the impact of marine traffic but not of tourism on breeding little penguins. / Dupuis, Benjamin; Kato, Akiko; Joly, Nicolas et al.
In: Biological Conservation, 01.11.2023.

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APA

Dupuis, B., Kato, A., Joly, N., Saraux, C., Ropert-Coudert, Y., Chiaradia, A., & Chimienti, M. (2023). COVID-related anthropause highlights the impact of marine traffic but not of tourism on breeding little penguins. Biological Conservation, Article 110323. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2023.110323

CBE

Dupuis B, Kato A, Joly N, Saraux C, Ropert-Coudert Y, Chiaradia A, Chimienti M. 2023. COVID-related anthropause highlights the impact of marine traffic but not of tourism on breeding little penguins. Biological Conservation. Article 110323. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2023.110323

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Dupuis B, Kato A, Joly N, Saraux C, Ropert-Coudert Y, Chiaradia A et al. COVID-related anthropause highlights the impact of marine traffic but not of tourism on breeding little penguins. Biological Conservation. 2023 Nov 1;110323. Epub 2023 Oct 28. doi: 10.1016/j.biocon.2023.110323

Author

Dupuis, Benjamin ; Kato, Akiko ; Joly, Nicolas et al. / COVID-related anthropause highlights the impact of marine traffic but not of tourism on breeding little penguins. In: Biological Conservation. 2023.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - COVID-related anthropause highlights the impact of marine traffic but not of tourism on breeding little penguins

AU - Dupuis, Benjamin

AU - Kato, Akiko

AU - Joly, Nicolas

AU - Saraux, Claire

AU - Ropert-Coudert, Yan

AU - Chiaradia, Andre

AU - Chimienti, Marianna

PY - 2023/11/1

Y1 - 2023/11/1

N2 - The COVID-19 pandemic and its lock-down measures have resulted in periods of reduced human activity, known as anthropause. While this period was expected to be favorable for the marine ecosystem, due to a probable reduction of pollution, shipping traffic, industrial activity and fishing pressure, negative counterparts such as reduced fisheries surveillance could counterbalance these positive effects. Simultaneously, on-land pressure due to human disturbance and tourism should have drastically decreased, potentially benefiting land-breeding marine animals such as seabirds. We analyzed 11 breeding seasons of data on several biological parameters of little penguins from a popular tourist attraction at Phillip Island, Australia. We investigated the impact of anthropogenic activities on penguin behavior during the breeding season measured by (1) distribution at sea, (2) colony attendance, (3) isotopic niche (4) chick meal mass, and (5) offspring investment against shipping traffic and number of tourists. The 2020 lock-downs resulted in a near absence of tourists visiting the Penguin Parade®, which was otherwise visited by 800,000+ visitors on average per breeding season. However, our long-term analysis showed no effect of the presence of visitors on little penguins' activities. Surprisingly, the anthropause did not trigger any changes in maritime traffic intensity and distribution in the region. We found inter- and intra-annual variations for most parameters, we detected a negative effect of marine traffic on the foraging efficiency. Our results suggest that environmental variations have a greater influence on the breeding behavior of little penguins compared to short-term anthropause events. Our long-term dataset was key to test whether changes in anthropogenic activities affected the wildlife during the COVID-19 pandemic.

AB - The COVID-19 pandemic and its lock-down measures have resulted in periods of reduced human activity, known as anthropause. While this period was expected to be favorable for the marine ecosystem, due to a probable reduction of pollution, shipping traffic, industrial activity and fishing pressure, negative counterparts such as reduced fisheries surveillance could counterbalance these positive effects. Simultaneously, on-land pressure due to human disturbance and tourism should have drastically decreased, potentially benefiting land-breeding marine animals such as seabirds. We analyzed 11 breeding seasons of data on several biological parameters of little penguins from a popular tourist attraction at Phillip Island, Australia. We investigated the impact of anthropogenic activities on penguin behavior during the breeding season measured by (1) distribution at sea, (2) colony attendance, (3) isotopic niche (4) chick meal mass, and (5) offspring investment against shipping traffic and number of tourists. The 2020 lock-downs resulted in a near absence of tourists visiting the Penguin Parade®, which was otherwise visited by 800,000+ visitors on average per breeding season. However, our long-term analysis showed no effect of the presence of visitors on little penguins' activities. Surprisingly, the anthropause did not trigger any changes in maritime traffic intensity and distribution in the region. We found inter- and intra-annual variations for most parameters, we detected a negative effect of marine traffic on the foraging efficiency. Our results suggest that environmental variations have a greater influence on the breeding behavior of little penguins compared to short-term anthropause events. Our long-term dataset was key to test whether changes in anthropogenic activities affected the wildlife during the COVID-19 pandemic.

U2 - 10.1016/j.biocon.2023.110323

DO - 10.1016/j.biocon.2023.110323

M3 - Article

JO - Biological Conservation

JF - Biological Conservation

SN - 0006-3207

M1 - 110323

ER -