2019
DOI: 10.1111/acv.12539
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Mortality of seabirds migrating across the tropical Atlantic in relation to oceanographic processes

Abstract: Large‐scale climatic processes such as the El Niño‐Southern Oscillation (ENSO) can have severe effects on the survival of seabirds in their breeding regions. However, there is a fundamental lack of understanding about how environmental factors are related to the mortality of these organisms in non‐breeding areas of the tropics. We investigate here the direct and indirect effects of ENSO and oceanographic variables on the mortality of three migratory seabird species targeted by conservation programmes focused o… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(13 citation statements)
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References 78 publications
(111 reference statements)
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“…Bottom-up effects: Murres as marine predators. Reduction in primary production, and ultimately zooplankton or forage fish biomass, has been implicated in past seabird die-offs and reproductive failures (e.g., [14,27,46,61,[74][75][76][77][78], often in association with anomalous oceanographic conditions (too warm, too cold, loss of upwelling, etc.). In order to understand how murres are affected by climate-mediated bottom-up changes in their forage base, we need to first consider their foraging ecology and the types of prey they eat.…”
Section: Causal Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bottom-up effects: Murres as marine predators. Reduction in primary production, and ultimately zooplankton or forage fish biomass, has been implicated in past seabird die-offs and reproductive failures (e.g., [14,27,46,61,[74][75][76][77][78], often in association with anomalous oceanographic conditions (too warm, too cold, loss of upwelling, etc.). In order to understand how murres are affected by climate-mediated bottom-up changes in their forage base, we need to first consider their foraging ecology and the types of prey they eat.…”
Section: Causal Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Continued at-sea studies and systematic beach surveys for stranded individuals will help to confirm the status of these species in the south-west Atlantic. Beach surveys are regular (e.g., Valls et al 2015, Tavares et al 2020, but systematic censuses of pelagic seabirds are scarce (Mott & Clarke 2018). We recommend greater effort in systematic at-sea surveys in the south-west Atlantic with a special focus on these species.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…In addition, we assumed that impacts from transmitter marking did not affect migration chronology and selection patterns for individuals. Although transmitter attachment can affect migrating bird's survival rates (Lameris et al., 2018 ), energy reserves (Hupp et al., 2015 ; Pennycuick et al., 2012 ), and migration chronology (Hupp et al., 2015 ), negative impacts of migration independent of carrying transmitters are relatively common in numerous bird taxa (Klaassen et al., 2014 ; Szostek & Becker, 2015 ; Tavares et al., 2020 ). We had some individuals for which we never received location data, or they “disappeared” mid‐track.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%