2014
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-014-3109-1
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Spatial foraging segregation by close neighbours in a wide-ranging seabird

Abstract: Breeding seabirds are central-place foragers and therefore exploit food resources most intensively nearer their colonies. When nesting aggregations are close to one another density-dependent competition is likely to be high, potentially promoting foraging segregation (i.e. neighbouring colonies may segregate to search for food in different areas). However, little is known about spatial segregation in foraging behaviour between closely adjacent colonies, particularly in species that are wide-ranging foragers. H… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…This suggests that LBBGs use segregated foraging sites in different habitats but that these sites showed similar prey availability within the two main foraging habitats (Ceia et al. ). However, dietary segregation might occur at the individual, rather than the colony level, as shown, e.g., for other gull species (Masello et al.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This suggests that LBBGs use segregated foraging sites in different habitats but that these sites showed similar prey availability within the two main foraging habitats (Ceia et al. ). However, dietary segregation might occur at the individual, rather than the colony level, as shown, e.g., for other gull species (Masello et al.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A straightforward approach to reporting individual variation in movement within a tracking dataset is to conduct and report individual-level analyses, as illustrated recently by Ceia et al (2015), Young et al (2015), and in the present study ( Table 2; Figures 2, 3). While identifying the locations and areas of high use regions is more challenging to describe quantitatively from stacked individual contours, the degree of variation among individuals is clear.…”
Section: Kernel Contour Locations Were Determined From Pooled Kde Itementioning
confidence: 99%
“…For each colony and period, the relationship between foraging trip maximum distance and duration was tested using generalized linear mixed models with duration as the dependent variable, maximum distance as a fixed effect, and individual bird as a random effect. Long-and short-distance trips were delineated by a 200 km maximum distance contour, a distance giving good separation between chick-provisioning and self-maintenance trips in this species (Shoji et al 2015) and similar to that used to define local foraging in the related Cory's shearwater (Ceia et al 2015). An additional 6 very long-range trips into the At lantic beyond the continental shelf edge (see Fig.…”
Section: Foraging Movementsmentioning
confidence: 99%