2021
DOI: 10.3354/meps13823
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Spatial variation in vital rates and population growth of thick-billed murres in the Atlantic Arctic

Abstract: Understanding spatiotemporal variation in vital rates and population growth rates is a central aim of population ecology, and is critical to conservation of migratory species where different populations may spend the non-breeding season in sometimes widely separated areas. However, estimating those parameters and identifying the underlying drivers of variation for species migrating to remote areas is challenging. The thick-billed murre Uria lomvia is a colonial seabird with a pan-Arctic distribution. Previous … Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Longer flights could represent a high energy search strategy (Norberg, 2021), suggesting murres could be tracking distant ice edges, cueing into foraging locations with higher prey availability when ice is still present. For example, in Iceland, thick-billed murres are cold-water specialists, selectively foraging in cooler waters in fjords and along the Marginal Ice Zone (Bonnet-Lebrun, Larsen, Frederiksen, et al, 2021;Bonnet-Lebrun, Larsen, Thórarinsson, et al, 2021). As we then observed a higher nutritional state (lower levels of non-esterified fatty acids) within a high ice regime during the chick-rearing stage, this further suggests prey availability may have been higher during a high ice regime.…”
supporting
confidence: 50%
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“…Longer flights could represent a high energy search strategy (Norberg, 2021), suggesting murres could be tracking distant ice edges, cueing into foraging locations with higher prey availability when ice is still present. For example, in Iceland, thick-billed murres are cold-water specialists, selectively foraging in cooler waters in fjords and along the Marginal Ice Zone (Bonnet-Lebrun, Larsen, Frederiksen, et al, 2021;Bonnet-Lebrun, Larsen, Thórarinsson, et al, 2021). As we then observed a higher nutritional state (lower levels of non-esterified fatty acids) within a high ice regime during the chick-rearing stage, this further suggests prey availability may have been higher during a high ice regime.…”
supporting
confidence: 50%
“…Furthermore, recent findings suggest environmental conditions during the nonbreeding season (overwintering and prebreeding areas) are one factor driving major differences in population trends of murres observed across the Atlantic, in addition to mortality caused by hunting and oil spills (Frederiksen et al, 2016(Frederiksen et al, , 2021. Rapid population declines are occurring in eastern Atlantic populations (breeding colonies in Iceland, Svalbard, and southwest Greenland) that overwinter in waters around southwest Greenland and Iceland (Frederiksen et al, 2016(Frederiksen et al, , 2021. Meanwhile, western Atlantic populations (breeding colonies in Canada and northwest Greenland), which overwinter in waters off Labrador and Newfoundland, remain stable (Frederiksen et al, 2016(Frederiksen et al, , 2021.…”
Section: Nutritional Biomarker Name Biological Interpretationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Thickbilled murre harvest in Greenland has declined from 200,000−250,000 birds in the mid 1990s to 60,000−80,000 birds annually in 2011 (Merkel et al 2014). In 2020 and 2021 harvest was approximately 30,000 birds per year in Greenland (Frederiksen et al 2021; N. Holm, Greenland Ministry of Fisheries, Hunting and Agriculture, personal communication) and <3,000 birds in Iceland (B. Jónsson, North West Iceland Nature Center, personal communication). In spite of these reduced harvest levels, renewed concern about the sustainability of murre harvests emerged in the 2010s (Frederiksen et al 2019(Frederiksen et al , 2021, as thick-billed murre populations throughout the Atlantic, including depressed populations in Greenland, were showing signs of decline (Descamps et al 2013, Merkel et al 2014.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 2020 and 2021 harvest was approximately 30,000 birds per year in Greenland (Frederiksen et al 2021; N. Holm, Greenland Ministry of Fisheries, Hunting and Agriculture, personal communication) and <3,000 birds in Iceland (B. Jónsson, North West Iceland Nature Center, personal communication). In spite of these reduced harvest levels, renewed concern about the sustainability of murre harvests emerged in the 2010s (Frederiksen et al 2019(Frederiksen et al , 2021, as thick-billed murre populations throughout the Atlantic, including depressed populations in Greenland, were showing signs of decline (Descamps et al 2013, Merkel et al 2014. Further, tracking studies of thick-billed murre clarified important linkages between breeding colonies and harvest areas that were previously unquantified (Frederiksen et al 2016).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%