Investigating the foraging ecology and energy requirements of a seabird population increasing in an intensely exploited marine environment

Doctoral Thesis

2017

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University of Cape Town

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Their high energetic demands make seabirds sensitive to changes in prey availability, which is often reflected in their diet and energetic expenditure during breeding. Populations of the three seabirds endemic to southern Africa's Benguela upwelling ecosystem that rely on small pelagic fish have decreased dramatically over the last decade. In contrast, the population of the greater crested tern Thalasseus bergii has increased. To understand these conflicting trends, I investigated the foraging ecology and energy requirements of greater crested tern breeding in the Western Cape, South Africa. Diet was assessed by a novel non-invasive methodology developed in this study, using digital photography. More than 24,000 prey items from at least 51 different prey taxa were identified, with 34 new prey species recorded, revealing a high degree of foraging plasticity for this seabird. Greater crested terns rely mainly on anchovy Engraulis encrasicolus (65%), which averaged 84 mm long. Prey composition differed significantly between breeding stages, with anchovy especially dominant at the onset of the breeding period and the diet becoming more variable as the season progressed. Time-energy models for breeding terns were built based on activity budgets collected from non-invasive video-recordings and focal observations. Foraging trips were significantly longer during incubation than the chick provisioning stages, and feeding rates doubled from early to late chick provisioning. This study illustrated a steady increase in energy needs of adults throughout the breeding season, due to their increased foraging effort to meet chick energy needs. In comparison to other Benguela endemic seabirds that also rely on small pelagic fish, terns displayed substantially lower energy requirements at both individual and population levels. I also explored the benefits underlying interactions within mixed-species aggregations by investigating the costs induced by kleptoparasitism between mixed colonies of greater crested terns and Hartlaub's gulls Chroicocephalus hartlaubii and colonies with greater crested terns alone. Video-recordings coupled with focal observations showed that terns suffer direct costs to chick provisioning rates and indirect costs through energy expenditure in a mixed-species colony, suggesting that these breeding assemblages may be a form of parasitism rather than a mutualistic association. Despite the detrimental effects of interspecific kleptoparasitism, the marked foraging plasticity and low energetic requirements of greater crested terns, described in this study, coupled with specific life history traits such as low fidelity to breeding sites and extended post-fledging care, are key factors that allow this species to cope with changes in the availability and abundance of their main prey. Understanding species-specific behavioural responses to ecosystem variations in the Benguela upwelling system is vital for assessing the impact of commercial fisheries on seabird populations and fish stocks. Finally, the implementation of the method developed in this study, in long-term monitoring programmes, may provide crucial knowledge for conservation plans and key input to realising an ecosystem approach to fisheries management.
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