Northern Gannet foraging trip length increases with colony size and decreases with latitude

Bethany L. Clark*, Freydís Vigfúsdóttir, Sarah Wanless, Keith C. Hamer, Thomas W. Bodey, Stuart Bearhop, Ashley Bennison, Jez Blackburn, Sam L. Cox, Kyle J. N. d’Entremont, Stefan Garthe, David Grémillet, Mark Jessopp, Jude Lane, Amélie Lescroël, William A. Montevecchi, David J. Pascall, Pascal Provost, Ewan D. Wakefield, Victoria Warwick‐EvansSaskia Wischnewski, Lucy J. Wright, Stephen C. Votier*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Density-dependent competition for food influences the foraging behaviour and demography of colonial animals, but how this influence varies across a species’ latitudinal range is poorly understood. Here we used satellite tracking from 21 Northern Gannet Morus bassanus colonies (39% of colonies worldwide, supporting 73% of the global population) during chick-rearing to test how foraging trip characteristics (distance and duration) covary with colony size (138–60 953 breeding pairs) and latitude across 89% of their latitudinal range (46.81–71.23° N). Tracking data for 1118 individuals showed that foraging trip duration and maximum distance both increased with square-root colony size. Foraging effort also varied between years for the same colony, consistent with a link to environmental variability. Trip duration and maximum distance also decreased with latitude, after controlling for colony size. Our results are consistent with density-dependent reduction in prey availability influencing colony size and reveal reduced competition at the poleward range margin. This provides a mechanism for rapid population growth at northern colonies and, therefore, a poleward shift in response to environmental change. Further work is required to understand when and how colonial animals deplete nearby prey, along with the positive and negative effects of social foraging behaviour.
Original languageEnglish
Article number240708
JournalRoyal Society Open Science
Volume11
Issue number9
Early online date4 Sept 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2024

Keywords

  • species distributions
  • predator–prey
  • central place foraging
  • seabird
  • bio-logging
  • coloniality

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