Menu

Volume 51, No. 2

Search by author or title:

Diet assessment and vulnerability of White-faced Storm Petrel Pelagodroma marina within a warming hotspot


Authors

MADHULI KARMALKAR1, LAUREN ROMAN1,2, FARZANA KASTURY3, FERNANDO ARCE GONZALEZ1,4 & KERRIE M. SWADLING1,5
1Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania 7004, Australia (madhulikarmalkar@gmail.com)
2CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere, Hobart, Tasmania 7004, Australia
3STEM, Future Industries Institute, Mawson Lakes, University of South Australia, South Australia 5095, Australia
4Department of Environmental Conservation, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA
5Australian Antarctic Program Partnership, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania 7004, Australia

Citation

KARMALKAR, M., ROMAN, L., KASTURY, F., GONZALEZ, F.A. & SWADLING, K.M. 2023. Diet assessment and vulnerability of White-faced Storm Petrel Pelagodroma marina within a warming hotspot. Marine Ornithology 51: 281 - 291

Received 17 October 2022, accepted 07 July 2023

Date Published: 2023/10/15
Date Online: 2023/10/12
Key words: White-faced Storm Petrel, Nyctiphanes australis, planktivorous seabirds, Bass Strait, sea surface temperatures, prey species, plastic ingestion

Abstract

Shifts in zooplankton communities due to changing ocean climate can affect foraging patterns among planktivorous seabirds. To better understand seabird response to environmental change in Bass Strait, southeast Australia, we investigated the prey species and 16 elements in prey and feathers of the planktivorous White-faced Storm Petrel Pelagodroma marina. The krill Nyctiphanes australis was the most abundant prey species, followed by several species of post-larval fish; otherwise, the species appeared to be a generalist feeder. Element concentrations of feathers were not significantly influenced by dietary composition. Likewise, element concentrations did not significantly differ between major prey species, confirming that the nutritional profile of these species is likely linked to their seawater environment. Given that White-faced Storm Petrels in Bass Strait substantially rely on a narrow range of prey species, this may increase their vulnerability to events that change their availability. As coastal krill is highly sensitive to sea surface temperatures (SST), the increases in SST predicted under climate change scenarios may alter the timing and abundance of krill swarms, which in turn may affect planktivores, including White-faced Storm Petrels.

References


ABRAHAM, C.L. & SYDEMAN, W.J. 2004. Ocean climate, euphausiids and auklet nesting: inter-annual trends and variation in phenology, diet and growth of a planktivorous seabird, Ptychoramphus aleuticus. Marine Ecology Progress Series 274: 235–250.

ALHO, M., CATRY, P., SILVA, M.C. ET AL. 2022. Revealing the foraging movements and diet of the White-faced Storm Petrel Pelagodroma marina in the NE Atlantic. Marine Biology 169: 91.

AMUNDSEN, P.A., GABLER, H.M. & STALDVIK, F.J. 1996. A new approach to graphical analysis of feeding strategy from stomach contents data—modification of the Costello (1990) method. Journal of Fish Biology 48: 607–614

BAKER, A. C., BODEN, B.P. & BRINTON, E. 1990. A practical guide to the euphausiids of the world Antarctic Science. Natural History Museum Publications 3: 227–227.

BLACKBURN, M. 1980. Observations on the distribution of Nyctiphanes australis Sars (Crustacea, Euphausiidae) in Australian waters. CSIRO Division of Fisheries and Oceanography, Report no.19. Hobart, Australia: CSIRO. [Accessed at http://www.cmar.csiro.au/e-print/open/CMReport_119.pdf on 17 September 2022]

BOND, A., JONES, I., SYDEMAN, W. 2011. Reproductive success of planktivorous seabirds in the North Pacific is related to ocean climate on decadal scales. Marine Ecology Progress Series 424: 205–218.

BOND, A.L. & LAVERS, J.L. 2014. Climate change alters the trophic niche of a declining apex marine predator. Global Change Biology 20: 2100–2107.

BREITBURG, D., LEVIN, L.A., OSCHLIES, A., ET AL. 2018. Declining oxygen in the global ocean and coastal waters. Science 359: eaam7240.

BRODEUR, R.D., HUNSICKER, M.E., HANN, A. & MILLER, T.W. 2019. Effects of warming ocean conditions on feeding ecology of small pelagic fishes in a coastal upwelling ecosystem: a shift to gelatinous food sources. Marine Ecology Progress Series 617–618: 149–163.

BROTHERS, N., PEMBERTON, D., PRYOR, H. & LUCIEER, V. 2001. Tasmania’s Offshore Islands: Seabirds and Other Natural Features. Hobart, Australia: University of Tasmania. [Accessed at http://ecite.utas.edu.au/34756/ on 17 September 2022.]

BURGER, J. & GOCHFELD, M. 2004. Marine birds as sentinels of environmental pollution. EcoHealth 1: 263–274.

CAI, W., SHI, G., COWAN, T., BI, D. & RIBBE, J. 2005. The response of the Southern Annular Mode, the East Australian Current, and the southern mid-latitude ocean circulation to global warming. Geophysical Research Letters 32: L23706.

CAREY, M.J. 2011. Intergenerational transfer of plastic debris by Short-tailed Shearwaters (Ardenna tenuirostris). Emu 111: 229–234.

CHAMBERS, L.E., DEVNEY, C.A., CONGDON, B.C., DUNLOP, N., WOEHLER, E.J. & DANN, P. 2011. Observed and predicted effects of climate on Australian seabirds. Emu – Austral Ornithology 111: 235–251.

BOLTOVSKOY, D. 1999. South Atlantic Zooplankton, Vol 1. Kerkwerve, The Netherlands: Backhuys Publishers.

BORGHESI, F., MIGANI, F., ANDREOTTI, A. ET AL. 2016. Metals and trace elements in feathers: a geochemical approach to avoid misinterpretation of analytical responses. Science of the Total Environment 544: 476–494.

DAUFRESNE, M., LENGFELLNER, K. & SOMMER, U. 2009. Global warming benefits the small in aquatic ecosystems. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106: 12788–12793.

DIAS, M.P., ET AL. 2019. Threats to seabirds: a global assessment. Biological Conservation 237: 525–537.

DONEY, S.C., RUCKELSHAUS, M, DUFFY, J.E. ET AL. 2012. Climate change impacts on marine ecosystems. Annual Review of Marine Science 4: 11–37.

DURANT, J., HJERMANN, D., OTTERSEN, G. & STENSETH, N. 2007. Climate and the match or mismatch between predator requirements and resource availability. Climate Research 33: 271283.

EINODER, L. D. 2009. A review of the use of seabirds as indicators in fisheries and ecosystem management. Fisheries Research 95: 6–13.

EIZENBERG, Y.H., FROMANT, A., LEC’HVIEN, A. & ARNOULD, J.P.Y. 2021. Contrasting impacts of environmental variability on the breeding biology of two sympatric small procellariiform seabirds in south-eastern Australia. PLoS One 16: 9.

ELLIOTT, J.E. 2005. Trace metals, stable isotope ratios, and trophic relations in seabirds from the North Pacific Ocean. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 24: 3099–3105.

EVANS, R., LEA, M.A. & HINDELL, M.A. 2021. Predicting the distribution of foraging seabirds during a period of heightened environmental variability. Ecological Applications 31: e02343.

EVANS, R., LEA, M.A., HINDELL, M.A. & SWADLING, K.M. 2020. Significant shifts in coastal zooplankton populations through the 2015/16 Tasman Sea marine heatwave. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 235: 106538.

FRITH, R., KRUG, D., RONCONI, R.A., WONG, S.N.P., MALLORY, M.L. & TRANQUILLA, L.A.M. 2020. Diet of Leach’s Storm Petrels (Hydrobates leucorhous) among three colonies in Atlantic Canada. Northeastern Naturalist 27: 612–630.

FROMANT, A., DELORD, K., BOST, C.A. ET AL. 2021. Impact of extreme environmental conditions: Foraging behaviour and trophic ecology responses of a diving seabird, the common diving petrel. Progress in Oceanography 198: 102676.

FROMANT, A., SCHUMANN, N., DANN, P., CHEREL, Y. & ARNOULD, J.P.Y. 2020. Trophic niches of a seabird assemblage in Bass Strait, south-eastern Australia. PeerJ 8: e8700.

FURNESS, R.W. 1985. Ingestion of plastic particles by seabirds at Gough Island, South Atlantic Ocean. Environmental Pollution Series A, Ecological and Biological 38: 261–272.

GILL, P., MORRICE, M., PAGE, B., PIRZL, R., LEVINGS, A. & COYNE, M. 2011. Blue whale habitat selection and within-season distribution in a regional upwelling system off southern Australia. Marine Ecology Progress Series 421: 243–263.

GREGG, W.W., CONKRIGHT, M.E., GINOUX, P., O’REILLY, J.E. & CASEY, N.W. 2003. Ocean primary production and climate: Global decadal changes. Geophysical Research Letters 30: 1809.

HARDING, A.M., PIATT, J.F., SCHMUTZ, J.A. ET AL. 2007. Prey density and the behavioral flexibility of a marine predator: the common murre (Uria aalge). Ecology 88: 2024–2033.

HARPER, P. 1987. Feeding behaviour and other notes on 20 species of Procellariiformes at sea. Notornis 34: 169–192.

HAZEN, E.L., ABRAHMS, B., BRODIE, S. ET AL. 2019. Marine top predators as climate and ecosystem sentinels. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 17: 565–574.

HOEGH-GULDBERG, O. & BRUNO, J.F. 2010. The impact of climate change on the world’s marine ecosystems. Science 328: 1523–1528.

IUCN (INTERNATIONAL UNION FOR THE CONSERVATION OF NATURE). 2021. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2021-2. [Accessed at https://www.iucnredlist.org. on 10 October 2021].

JAKUBAS, D., WOJCZULANIS-JAKUBAS, K., ILISZKO, L.M. ET AL. 2020. Flexibility of little auks foraging in various oceanographic features in a changing Arctic. Scientific Reports 10: 1–18.

JONES, T., PARRISH, J.K., PETERSON, W.T. ET AL. 2018. Massive mortality of a planktivorous seabird in response to a marine heatwave. Geophysical Research Letters 45: 3193–3202.

KASTURY, F., TANG, W., HERDE, C., NOERPEL, M.R., SCHECKEL, K.G. & JUHASZ, A.L. 2021. Plumbojarosite formation in contaminated soil to mitigate childhood exposure to lead arsenic and antimony. Journal of Hazardous Materials 418: 126312.

KELLY, P., CLEMENTSON, L., DAVIES C., CORNEY, S. & SWADLING, K. 2016. Zooplankton responses to increasing sea surface temperatures in the south-eastern Australia global marine hotspot. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 180: 242–257.

KOWALCZYK, N.D., CHIARADIA, A., PRESTON, T.J. & REINA, R.D. 2014. Linking dietary shifts and reproductive failure in seabirds: a stable isotope approach. Functional Ecology 28: 755–765.

LAVERS, J.L., BOND, A.L. & HUTTON, I. 2014. Plastic ingestion by Flesh-footed Shearwaters (Puffinus carneipes): Implications for fledgling body condition and the accumulation of plastic-derived chemicals. Environmental Pollution 187: 124–129.

MALLORY, M.L., ROBINSON, S.A., HEBERT, C.E. & FORBES, M.R. 2010. Seabirds as indicators of aquatic ecosystem conditions: a case for gathering multiple proxies of seabird health. Marine Pollution Bulletin 60: 7–12.

MANNO, K., LOH, G. & VAN HEEZIK, Y. 2014. Buffering against food availability? The physical environment has little influence on breeding performance of fairy prions (Pachyptila turtur). Austral Ecology 39: 548–559.

MARCHANT, S. & HIGGINS, P.J. 1990. Handbook of Australian, New Zealand & Antarctic Birds. Volume 1, Ratites to ducks; Part A, Ratites to Petrels. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.

MILLS, J.A., YARRALL, J.W., BRADFORD-GRIEVE, J.M., UDDSTROM, M.J., RENWICK, J.A. & MERILA, J. 2008. The impact of climate fluctuation on food availability and reproductive performance of the planktivorous red-billed gull Larus novaehollandiae scopulinus. Journal of Animal Ecology 77: 1129–1142.

NAVARRO, J. VOTIER, S.C. & PHILLIPS, R.A. 2014. Diving capabilities of diving petrels. Polar Biology 37: 897–901.

O'BRIEN, D. 1988. Surface schooling behaviour of the coastal krill Nyctiphanes australis (Crustacea: Euphausiacea) off Tasmania, Australia. Marine Ecology Progress Series Oldendorf 42: 219–233.

O'CONNOR, M.I., BRUNO, J.F., GAINES, S.D. ET AL. 2007. Temperature control of larval dispersal and the implications for marine ecology, evolution, and conservation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104: 1266–1271.

OLIVER, E.C.J., BURROWS, M.T., DONAT, M.G. ET AL. 2019. Projected marine heatwaves in the 21st century and the potential for ecological impact. Frontiers in Marine Science 6: 734.

OSBOURNE, O., O’HARA, P., WHELAN, S., ZANDBERGEN, P., HATCH, S. & ELLIOTT, K. 2020 Breeding seabirds increase foraging range in response to an extreme marine heatwave. Marine Ecology Progress Series 646: 161–173.

PACYNA, A.D., JAKUBAS, D., AUSEMS, A., FRANKOWSKI, M, POLKPWSKA, Ż. & WOJCZULANIS-JAKUBAS, K. 2019. Storm petrels as indicators of pelagic seabird exposure to chemical elements in the Antarctic marine ecosystem. Science of the Total Environment 692: 382–392.

PIATT, J. F., SYDEMAN, W.J., BROWMAN, H. ET AL. 2007. Seabirds as indicators of marine ecosystems. Marine Ecology Progress Series 352: 199.

PIATT, J.F., PARRISH, J.K., RENNER, H.M. ET AL. 2020. Extreme mortality and reproductive failure of common murres resulting from the northeast Pacific marine heatwave of 2014-2016. PLoS One 15: e0226087.

PITT, N.R., POLOCZANSKA, E.S. & HOBDAY, A.J. 2010. Climate-driven range changes in Tasmanian intertidal fauna. Marine and Freshwater Research 61: 963–970.

POLOCZANSKA, E., BABOCK, R., BUTLER, A. ET AL. 2007. Climate change and Australian marine life. Oceanography and Marine Biology 45: 407–478.

POLOVINA, J.J., HOWELL, E.A. & ABECASSIS, M. 2008. Ocean's least productive waters are expanding. Geophysical Research Letters 35: L03618.

POORE, G.C. 2004. Marine Decapod Crustacea of Southern Australia: A Guide to Identification. Hobart, Australia: CSIRO Publishing. [Accessed at https://isopods.nhm.org/pdfs/21259/21259.pdf on 17 September 2022.]

PRINCE, P.A. 1980. The food and feeding ecology of grey-headed albatross Diomedea chrysostoma and black-browed albatross D. melanophris. Ibis 122: 476–488.

QUILLFELDT, P. 2002. Seasonal and annual variation in the diet of breeding and non-breeding Wilson's Storm Petrels on King George Island, South Shetland Islands. Polar Biology 25: 216–221.

QUILLFELDT P., STRANGE, I.J. & MASELLO J.F. 2007. Sea surface temperatures and behavioural buffering capacity in thin‐billed prions Pachyptila belcheri: breeding success, provisioning and chick begging. Journal of Avian Biology 38: 298–308.

RIDGWAY, K.R. 2007. Long‐term trend and decadal variability of the southward penetration of the East Australian Current. Geophysical Research Letters 34: L13613.

ROCHMAN, C.M., HOH, E., KUROBE, T. & TEH, S.J. 2013. Ingested plastic transfers hazardous chemicals to fish and induces hepatic stress. Scientific Reports 3: 1–7.

ROMAN, L., BELL, E., WILCOX, C., HARDESTY, B.D. & HINDELL, M. 2019. Ecological drivers of marine debris ingestion in Procellariiform Seabirds. Scientific Reports 9: 916.

ROMAN, L., SCHUYLER, Q.A., HARDESTY, B.D. & TOWNSEND, K.A. 2016. Anthropogenic debris ingestion by avifauna in Eastern Australia. PLoS One 11: e0158343.

ROSS, G., BURBIDGE, A., BROTHERS, N. ET AL. 1995. The status of Australia's seabirds. In: ZANN, L.P. & KAILOLA, P. (Eds). The State of the Marine Environment Report for Australia. Technical Annex:1. The Marine Environment. Canberra, Australia: Department of the Environment, Sport, and Territories, Canberra.

ROXY, M.K., MODI, A., MURTUGUDDE, R. ET AL. 2016. A reduction in marine primary productivity driven by rapid warming over the tropical Indian Ocean. Geophysical Research Letters 43: 826–833.

RYAN, P.G. 1987 The incidence and characteristics of plastic particles ingested by seabirds. Marine Environmental Research 23: 175–206.

RYAN, P.G. 1988 Effects of ingested plastic on seabird feeding: Evidence from chickens. Marine Pollution Bulletin 19: 125–128.

SANDERY, P.A. & KAMPF, J. 2005. Winter-spring flushing of Bass Strait, South-Eastern Australia: a numerical modelling study. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 63: 23–31.

SANDERY, P.A. & KAMPF, J. 2007. Transport timescales for identifying seasonal variation in Bass Strait, south-eastern Australia. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 74: 684–696.

SANFORD, E., SONES, J.L., GARCIA-REYES, M., GODDARD, J.H. & LARGIER, J.L. 2019. Widespread shifts in the coastal biota of northern California during the 2014–2016 marine heatwaves. Scientific Reports 9: 1–14.

SCHUMANN, N, ARNOULD, J.P. & DANN, P. 2008. Diet of common diving-petrels (Pelecanoides urinatrix urinatrix) in south-eastern Australia during chick rearing. Waterbirds 31: 620–624.

SHEARD, K. 1953. Taxonomy, distribution and development of the Euphausiacea (Crustacea). Reports B.A.N.Z. Antarctic Research Expedition (series B). 8.

SOMMERFELD, J., KATO, A., ROPERT-COUDERT, Y., GARTHE, S., WILCOX, C. & HINDELL, M.A. 2015. Flexible foraging behaviour in a marine predator, the Masked booby (Sula dactylatra), according to foraging locations and environmental conditions. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 463: 79–86.

SPEAR L.B., AINLEY D.G. & RIBIC C.A. 1995. Incidence of plastic in seabirds from the tropical Pacific, 1984-91: Relation with distribution of species, sex, age, season, year and body weight. Marine Environmental Research 40: 123–146.

SPEAR L.B., AINLEY, D.G. & WALKER, W.A. 2007. Foraging dynamics of seabirds in the eastern tropical Pacific ocean. Studies in Avian Biology 35: 1–99.

SYDEMAN, W., THOMPSON, S. & KITAYSKY, A. 2012. Seabirds and climate change: roadmap for the future. Marine Ecology Progress Series 454: 107–117.

SYDEMAN, W.J., BRADLEY, R.W., WARZYBOK, P. ET AL. 2006. Planktivorous auklet Ptychoramphus aleuticus responses to ocean climate, 2005: Unusual atmospheric blocking? Geophysical Research Letters 33: L22S09.

TANAKA, K., VAN FRANEKER, J.A., DEGUCHI, T. & TAKADA, H. 2019. Piece-by-piece analysis of additives and manufacturing byproducts in plastics ingested by seabirds: Implication for risk of exposure to seabirds. Marine Pollution Bulletin 145: 36–41.

UNDERWOOD, M. 2012. Does Size Matter? Sex Differences in White-Faced Storm Petrels’ Ecology. PhD Thesis. Burwood, Australia: Deakin University.

USEPA. 1998. Method 6020A (SW-846): Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry, Revision 1. [Accessed at https://www.nemi.gov/methods/method_summary/9186/ on 17 September 2022.]

WEIMERSKIRCH, H. & CHERER, Y. 1998. Feeding ecology of short-tailed shearwaters: breeding in Tasmania and foraging in the Antarctic? Marine Ecology Progress Series 167: 261–274.

WILCOS, C., VAN SEBILLE, E. & HARDESTY, B.D. 2015. Threat of plastic pollution to seabirds is global, pervasive, and increasing. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112: 11899.

YOUNG, J.W., JORDAN, A.R., BOBBI, C., JOHANNES, R.E., HASKARD, K. & PULLEN, G. 1993. Seasonal and interannual variability in krill (Nyctiphanes australis) stocks and their relationship to the fishery for jack mackerel (Trachurus declivis) off eastern Tasmania, Australia. Marine Biology 116: 9–18.

Search by author or title:

Browse previous volumes: