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Sex differences in migration and demography of a wide-ranging seabird, the northern gannet

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Deakin_2019_MEPS_northerngannet_CC.pdf (516Kb)
Date
18/07/2019
Author
Deakin, Zoe
Hamer, Keith C.
Sherley, Richard B.
Bearhop, Stuart
Bodey, Thomas W.
Clark, Bethany L.
Grecian, W. James
Gummery, Matt
Lane, Jude
Morgan, Greg
Morgan, Lisa
Phillips, Richard A.
Wakefield, Ewan D.
Votier, Stephen C.
Keywords
Canary current
Capture–mark–recapture
Geolocator
Large marine ecosystem
Migratory
Seabird
Sex
QH301 Biology
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Aquatic Science
Ecology
NDAS
SDG 14 - Life Below Water
Metadata
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Abstract
Marine vertebrates show a diversity of migration strategies, including sex differences. This may lead to differential demography, but the consequences of such between-sex variation are little understood. Here, we studied the migration of known-sex northern gannets Morus bassanus — a partial migrant with females ~8 % heavier than males. We used geolocators to determine wintering areas of 49 breeding adults (19 females and 30 males during 2010 to 2014) from 2 colonies in the northeast Atlantic (Bass Rock and Grassholm, UK). We also tested for sex-specific survival probabilities using capture−mark−recapture methods (n = 72 individuals Bass Rock, n = 229 individuals Grassholm; 2010−2018) and applied sex-specific population projection matrices (PPMs) to quantify population-level effects. Tracked gannets wintered in a range of large marine ecosystems (LMEs): Canary Current LME (CCLME; 69 %), Celtic-Biscay Shelf LME (16 %), Iberian Coastal LME (8 %), North Sea LME (4 %) or Mediterranean LME (2 %). Migratory destination differed between the sexes: 90 % of females vs. 57 % of males wintered in the CCLME. Survival was similar between the sexes at Bass Rock (mean ± 95 % CI = 0.951 ± 0.053 and 0.956 ± 0.047 for females and males, respectively). At Grassholm, there was evidence of slight sex differences in breeder survival: females had lower annual survival (0.882 ± 0.040) than males (0.946 ± 0.026). At Bass Rock, PPMs with no sex effect best fitted the observed population increase (1994−2014). Sex-specific PPMs fitted the population estimates for Grassholm (1995−2015). Our results reveal that female gannets are more likely to travel further than males to winter in the CCLME. This difference is unlikely due to morphological differences, unlike in other bird species. However, the reason for slightly higher over-winter female mortality at Grassholm is unclear.
Citation
Deakin , Z , Hamer , K C , Sherley , R B , Bearhop , S , Bodey , T W , Clark , B L , Grecian , W J , Gummery , M , Lane , J , Morgan , G , Morgan , L , Phillips , R A , Wakefield , E D & Votier , S C 2019 , ' Sex differences in migration and demography of a wide-ranging seabird, the northern gannet ' , Marine Ecology Progress Series , vol. 622 , pp. 191-201 . https://doi.org/10.3354/meps12986
Publication
Marine Ecology Progress Series
Status
Peer reviewed
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3354/meps12986
ISSN
0171-8630
Type
Journal article
Rights
Copyright © The authors 2019. Open Access under Creative Commons by Attribution Licence. Use, distribution and reproduction are unrestricted. Authors and original publication must be credited.
Description
The work was funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (Standard Research Grant NE/H007466/1) and donations from Evan Fountain (In Memoriam donations for Issy Fountain) and Mike Matthewson.
Collections
  • University of St Andrews Research
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10023/18428

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