The impact of the physical environment on the foraging energetics of shearwaters and the consequences for breeding success

Lead Research Organisation: Bangor University
Department Name: Sch of Ocean Sciences

Abstract

The distribution and availability of food in the marine environment is highly variable over space and time. This creates significant challenges for marine top predators, including seabirds and marine mammals, as they must deploy an efficient movement strategy in their search for food, while navigating an ever-changing landscape of winds, waves and ocean currents. However, oceanographic features, such as tidal mixing fronts enhance productivity, which in turn attracts pelagic and demersal fish. Thus, there is a strong linkage between the dynamic physical environment and the predictability of prey assemblages. Nevertheless, the influence of the physical environment on the distribution of prey in space and time, and the subsequent consequences for marine top predator movement decisions, energetic costs, and offspring success have rarely been studied on a day-by-day basis. For breeding seabirds, their fine-scale movement decisions are typically constrained by the location of terrestrial colonies. This forces them to regularly navigate the variable wind and wave landscape between the terrestrial colony and the preferred offshore foraging areas, often separated by tens to hundreds of kilometres. In doing so they must constantly adapt their behaviour with consequences for route choice, energetic costs, and chick provisioning.
Our project will disentangle the effect of the physical environment on prey availability, movement decisions, flight costs, and chick provisioning using a case study involving Manx shearwaters (Puffinus puffinus) breeding on two colonies within the Irish Sea. Manx shearwaters breeding on Bardsey Island and the Calf of Man forage around a tidal mixing front, namely the Irish Sea Front (ISF). Manx shearwaters are adept fliers and an excellent model species in this context as they use strong winds and waves for low energy soaring but must beat their wings more frequently during low wind conditions, which is energetically more costly. Birds from the two study populations are known to target overlapping foraging areas around the ISF, but operate from opposite sides of the same windscape, resulting in different energetic consequences and foraging strategies. Therefore, variability in wind conditions and the maintenance of ocean fronts are critical to provisioning and successfully rearing chicks. We will monitor the movement decisions and flight costs of Manx shearwaters across two breeding seasons using solar charged GPS and accelerometer tags, and shorter-term high resolution accelerometer tags with inbuilt ECG (to measure heart rate). Accelerometers provide 3-axis acceleration data that measure behaviour and wingbeat frequency which can be converted into estimates of flight costs, along with records of heart rate. Fine scale environmental data will be extracted from across the study area, including wind and waves, while oceanographic models will be used to calculate the position and strength of the ISF over the course of the summers. Changes in the availability of pelagic and demersal prey (e.g. herring, sprat, cod, whiting) will be monitored using a moored echosounder over the course of the summer, while the spatial prey field across the ISF will be measured using ship based echosounder surveys. We will weigh adults and chicks before and after a foraging trip to determine the consequences of movement costs and foraging effort on adult fitness and chick growth.
Using projected changes to the ocean windscape, ocean warming and stratification, we will model the consequences of continued climate change on Manx shearwater movement costs and foraging success. The predicted reduction in the windscape and increased stratification could have disparate effects on the energy budget of breeding Manx shearwaters with consequences for population persistence. This project is critical if we are to understand the impacts of future climate change on these ecologically important species.

Publications

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Title Bardsey Manx shearwater GPS tracks (2022) 
Description This dataset contains 5 minute GPS locations from 64 Manx shearwaters tagged on Bardsey Island 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact This dataset is crucial to achieve the objectives of three of our work packages. 
 
Title Bardsey Manx shearwater acceleration data (2022) 
Description This dataset contains acceleration data from biologgers deployed on Manx shearwaters from Bardsey Island 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact This dataset is crucial for three of this projects work packages 
 
Title Copeland Manx shearwater GPS tracks (2022) 
Description This dataset contains 5 minute GPS locations from 35 Manx shearwater tracks from Copeland Island 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact This dataset is crucial to achieve the objectives of three of this projects work packages 
 
Title Copeland Manx shearwater acceleration data (2022) 
Description This dataset contains acceleration data from biologgers deployed on Manx shearwaters from Copeland Island 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact This dataset is crucial for three of this projects work packages 
 
Title Echosounder data on individual fish from the Irish Sea front collected using the Prince Madog (2022) 
Description This dataset contains data on individual fish including information on depth, latitude, longitude, and time. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact This dataset supports all four work packages on this project 
 
Title Echosounder fish school data from the Irish Sea front collected using the Prince Madog (2022) 
Description This dataset contains data on fish school including the following characteristics: depth, size, dimensions, density/intensity, variability, lat/lon, time 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact This dataset is crucial for all four work packages 
 
Title WBAT data on individual fish from a single position at the Irish Sea Front (2022) 
Description Each fish is a record with properties and statistics including depth, latitude, longitude, and time as well as the horizontal dimensions of time, given space is one location. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact This dataset supports all four work packages 
 
Title WBAT fish school data from a single position at the Irish Sea Front (2022) 
Description Each fish school is a record with properties and statistics including depth, size, dimensions, density/intensity, variability, latitude, longitude, time as well as horizontal dimensions of time, given space is one location, so not all school dimensions are available. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact This dataset supports all four work packages. 
 
Title Water temperatures from thermistor chain collected from transects across the Irish Sea Front (2022) 
Description Water temperatures collected from thermistors as different depths while running transects across the Irish Sea Front using the Prince Madog. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact This dataset will help validate oceanographic models of physical features in the Irish Sea which feed into all four work packages 
 
Description Met Office 
Organisation Meteorological Office UK
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution The Irish Sea is a relatively data poor region of the North West European shelf sea (compared to the North Sea), and so additional data and process assessment will be welcomed by the Met Office. The QUID covers a wide range of parameters, however, does not specifically include fronts. Any assessment of the fronts within the CMEMS reanalysis will be useful, especially if they can form the basis of a recurring assessment for future QUIDs. Part of our work will be to consider the impact of climate change on Irish Sea fronts. We plan to use Met Office NWS climate projections (CMIP5 models downscaled with a 7km NWS model). The frontal behaviour of these models has not been assessed, and so our assessments will also be of interest to the Met Office. Overall, the outcomes of specific components of this project will be of interest to the Met Office, and with a careful consideration, may be of direct use to the Met Office.
Collaborator Contribution Part of our project involves assessing the frontal properties within the Irish Sea. We will do this by analysing Copernicus Marine Environmental Monitoring Service (CMEMS), ECMWF and Met Office model and reanalysis data. Frontal properties studied include locations, gradients, and timing of formation and break-down. The Met Office provides the North West European shelf sea (NWS) reanalysis to CMEMS. Evaluation is provided in the Quality Information Document (QUID).
Impact This is a multidisciplinary collaboration involving physical oceanography, climate science, fisheries science and animal ecology.
Start Year 2022