Selective foraging behavior of seabirds in small-scale slicks

Research output: Contribution to journalLetterpeer-review

Electronic versions

Documents

DOI

  • Lilian Lieber
  • Cynthia Füchtencordsjürgen
    Bielefeld University
  • Rebecca L. Hilder
    Bielefeld University
  • Paula J. Revering
    Bielefeld University
  • Inka Siekmann
    Bielefeld University
  • Roland Langrock
    Bielefeld University
  • W. Alex M. Nimmo-Smith
    University of Plymouth
Marine predator foraging opportunities are often driven by dynamic physical processes enhancing prey accessibility. Surface slicks are ubiquitous yet ephemeral ocean features where convergent flows accumulate flotsam, concentrating marine organisms and pollutants. Slicks can manifest on the sea surface as meandering lines and seabirds often associate with slicks. Yet, how slicks may influence the fine-scale foraging behavior of seabirds is only coarsely resolved. Here we show that seabirds selectively forage in small-scale slicks. We used aerial drone technology to track surface-foraging terns (Sternidae, 107 tracks) over evolving slicks advected by the mean flow and reshaped by localized turbulence at scales of meters and seconds. Terns were more likely to switch into high-tortuosity foraging behavior when over slicks, with plunge-dive events occurring significantly more often within slicks. As we demonstrate that terns select dynamic slicks for foraging, our approach will also lend itself to interaction studies with pollutants, plumes, and fronts.
Original languageEnglish
Article number10289
Pages (from-to)286-294
Number of pages9
JournalLimnology and Oceanography Letters
Volume8
Issue number2
Early online date8 Nov 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2023

Total downloads

No data available
View graph of relations