Title of article
Does small-scale vertical distribution of juvenile schooling fish affect prey availability to surface-feeding seabirds in the Wadden Sea?
Author/Authors
Dنnhardt، نويسنده , , Andreas and Becker، نويسنده , , Peter H.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
9
From page
247
To page
255
Abstract
Food availability is a key variable influencing breeding performance and demography of marine top predators. Due to methodological problems, proportionality between fish abundance and availability is often assumed without being explicitly tested. More specifically, better breeding performance of surface-feeding seabirds at times of large prey stocks suggests that prey availability is also a function of prey abundance. Using vertically resolved stow net sampling we tested whether local abundance and length composition of pelagic fish are reliable predictors of the availability of these fish to surface-feeding Common Terns (Sterna hirundo) breeding in the German Wadden Sea. Prey fish were found to concentrate below the maximum diving depth of the terns. Individuals caught close to the surface were in most cases smaller than conspecifics caught at greater depth. Correlations between fish abundance within and out of reach of the terns appeared to be both species- and site-specific rather than driven by overall fish abundance. Vertical distribution patterns of the ternsʹ main prey fish could be explained as anti-predator behavior, reducing prey availability to the terns. In 2007, when breeding performance was much better than in 2006, herring and whiting were much more abundant, suggesting that overall prey abundance may also increase prey availability in habitats other than those represented by the stow net sampling.
Keywords
breeding performance , Prey availability , Surface-feeding , Sterna hirundo , vertical distribution , Wadden Sea , Pelagic schooling fish
Journal title
Journal of Sea Research
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Journal of Sea Research
Record number
2236797
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