Foraging Seabirds Respond To An Intermittent Meteorological Event In A Coastal Environment

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Foraging Seabirds Respond To An Intermittent Meteorological Event In A Coastal Environment. / Waggitt, James; Torres, Ricardo; Fraser, Shaun.
In: Marine Ornithology, Vol. 48, No. 1, 15.04.2020, p. 123-131.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Waggitt, J, Torres, R & Fraser, S 2020, 'Foraging Seabirds Respond To An Intermittent Meteorological Event In A Coastal Environment', Marine Ornithology, vol. 48, no. 1, pp. 123-131.

APA

Waggitt, J., Torres, R., & Fraser, S. (2020). Foraging Seabirds Respond To An Intermittent Meteorological Event In A Coastal Environment. Marine Ornithology, 48(1), 123-131.

CBE

MLA

Waggitt, James, Ricardo Torres and Shaun Fraser. "Foraging Seabirds Respond To An Intermittent Meteorological Event In A Coastal Environment". Marine Ornithology. 2020, 48(1). 123-131.

VancouverVancouver

Waggitt J, Torres R, Fraser S. Foraging Seabirds Respond To An Intermittent Meteorological Event In A Coastal Environment. Marine Ornithology. 2020 Apr 15;48(1):123-131. Epub 2020 Mar 30.

Author

Waggitt, James ; Torres, Ricardo ; Fraser, Shaun. / Foraging Seabirds Respond To An Intermittent Meteorological Event In A Coastal Environment. In: Marine Ornithology. 2020 ; Vol. 48, No. 1. pp. 123-131.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Foraging Seabirds Respond To An Intermittent Meteorological Event In A Coastal Environment

AU - Waggitt, James

AU - Torres, Ricardo

AU - Fraser, Shaun

PY - 2020/4/15

Y1 - 2020/4/15

N2 - Temporal variations in the numbers of foraging seabirds usually coincide with concurrent variations in physical processes influencing prey availability. Responses to periodic tidal currents are commonly reported, with certain tidal states being favoured. By contrast, responses to intermittent meteorological events have rarely been reported, even though wind-driven exchanges of water masses or intrusion of estuarine plumes could have similar consequences. As large-scale offshore constructions (e.g. aquaculture, coastal defences, ports and marine renewable energy installations) and climate variations alter periodic tidal currents and intermittent meteorological events, respectively, quantifying responses to these physical processes identifies potential impacts on seabird communities. This study quantifies responses of foraging seabirds to physical processes in the Ria de Vigo, north-western Spain. The numbers of foraging European Shags Phalacrocorax aristotellis and Yellow-legged Gulls Larus michahellis showed no response to variations in current direction and speed. By contrast, both increased in number during an estuarine plume intrusion (the Western Iberian Buoyant Plume: WIBP) following an extreme river discharge event and southerly winds. These increases may be explained by the temporary combination of marine and brackish-water fauna, increasing prey biomass. The frequency of extreme river discharge events is likely to decrease in north-western Spain. If WIBP intrusions consistently enhance prey availability, observations of large numbers of foraging seabirds using the ria could become rarer.

AB - Temporal variations in the numbers of foraging seabirds usually coincide with concurrent variations in physical processes influencing prey availability. Responses to periodic tidal currents are commonly reported, with certain tidal states being favoured. By contrast, responses to intermittent meteorological events have rarely been reported, even though wind-driven exchanges of water masses or intrusion of estuarine plumes could have similar consequences. As large-scale offshore constructions (e.g. aquaculture, coastal defences, ports and marine renewable energy installations) and climate variations alter periodic tidal currents and intermittent meteorological events, respectively, quantifying responses to these physical processes identifies potential impacts on seabird communities. This study quantifies responses of foraging seabirds to physical processes in the Ria de Vigo, north-western Spain. The numbers of foraging European Shags Phalacrocorax aristotellis and Yellow-legged Gulls Larus michahellis showed no response to variations in current direction and speed. By contrast, both increased in number during an estuarine plume intrusion (the Western Iberian Buoyant Plume: WIBP) following an extreme river discharge event and southerly winds. These increases may be explained by the temporary combination of marine and brackish-water fauna, increasing prey biomass. The frequency of extreme river discharge events is likely to decrease in north-western Spain. If WIBP intrusions consistently enhance prey availability, observations of large numbers of foraging seabirds using the ria could become rarer.

UR - https://www.marineornithology.org/PDF/48_1/48_1_125-131.pdf

M3 - Article

VL - 48

SP - 123

EP - 131

JO - Marine Ornithology

JF - Marine Ornithology

IS - 1

ER -