期刊论文详细信息
Marine Ecology Progress Series
Time-in-area represents foraging activity in a wide-ranging pelagic forager
J. A. Green1  P. W. Atkinson1  #x200E, R. D. Gauvain1  V. Warwick-Evans1  J. P. Y. Arnould1  L. A. Robinson1 
关键词: Northern gannet;    Biologging;    Marine Spatial Planning;    Accelerometer;    GPS tracking;    Morus bassanus;   
DOI  :  10.3354/meps11262
学科分类:海洋学与技术
来源: Inter-Research
PDF
【 摘 要 】

ABSTRACT: Successful Marine Spatial Planning depends upon the identification of areas with high importance for particular species, ecosystems or processes. For seabirds, advancements in biologging devices have enabled us to identify these areas through the detailed study of at-sea behaviour. However, in many cases, only positional data are available and the presence of local biological productivity and hence seabird foraging behaviour is inferred from these data alone, under the untested assumption that foraging activity is more likely to occur in areas where seabirds spend more time. We fitted GPS devices and accelerometers to northern gannets Morus bassanus and categorised the behaviour of individuals outside the breeding colony as plunge diving, surface foraging, floating and flying. We then used the locations of foraging events to test the efficiency of 2 approaches: time-in-area and kernel density (KD) analyses, which are widely employed to detect highly-used areas and interpret foraging behaviour from positional data. For KD analyses, the smoothing parameter (h) was calculated using the ad hoc method (KDad hoc), and KDh=9.1, where h = 9.1 km, to designate core foraging areas from location data. A high proportion of foraging events occurred in core foraging areas designated using KDad hoc, KDh=9.1, and time-in-area. Our findings demonstrate that foraging activity occurs in areas where seabirds spend more time, and that both KD analysis and the time-in-area approach are equally efficient methods for this type of analysis. However, the time-in-area approach is advantageous in its simplicity, and in its ability to provide the shapes commonly used in planning. Therefore, the time-in-area approach can be used as a simple way of using seabirds to identify ecologically important locations from both tracking and survey data.

【 授权许可】

Unknown   

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
RO201912010136488ZK.pdf 1146KB PDF download
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:6次 浏览次数:26次