Abstract

Relating the effects of foraging niche variation to reproductive dynamics is critical to understand species response to environmental change. We examined foraging niche variations of the slender‐billed gull (Chroicocephalus genei), a nomadic colonial waterbird species during its range expansion along the French Mediterranean coast over a 16‐year period (1998–2013). We investigated whether range expansion was associated with a change in chick diet, breeding success, and chicks body condition. We also examined whether breeding success and chicks body condition were explained by diet and colonial characteristics (number of pairs, laying phenology, habitat, and locality). Diet was characterized using dual‐stable isotopic proxies (δ 13C and δ 15N) of feather keratin from 331 individuals subsampled from a total of 4,154 chicks ringed and measured at 18 different colonies. δ 13C decreased and δ 15N increased significantly during range expansion suggesting that chicks were fed from preys of increasing trophic level found in the less salty habitat colonized by the end of the study period. Niche shift occurred without significant change of niche width which did not vary among periods, habitats, or localities either. Breeding success and chick body condition showed no consistent trends over years. Breeding success tended to increase with decreasing δ 13C at the colony level while there was no relationship between stable isotope signatures and chick body condition. Overall, our results suggest that even if range expansion is associated with foraging niche shift toward the colonization of less salty and more brackish habitats, the shift had marginal effect on the breeding parameters of the Slender‐billed gull. Niche width appears as an asset of this species, which likely explains its ability to rapidly colonize new locations.

Highlights

  • Global changes have been shown to sharply and rapidly affect the distribution of bird populations (Barnosky et al, 2011; Cahill et al, 2014)

  • Our results show that the range expansion of the Slender-billed gull that occurred over 1998–2013 was accompanied by a shift in foraging niche used by breeding birds

  • Despite the changes in diet detected, we found no significant change in niche width (SEAc)

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Global changes have been shown to sharply and rapidly affect the distribution of bird populations (Barnosky et al, 2011; Cahill et al, 2014). Despite the known importance of diet on population dynamics (e.g., on survival [Descamps, Boutin, Berteaux, McAdam, & Gaillard, 2009, Ford, Ellis, Olesiuk, & Balcomb, 2010, Duriez, Ens, Choquet, Pradel, & Klaassen, 2012] and reproduction [Kvarnemo, 1997; Rutz & Bijlsma, 2006; Tavecchia, Pradel, Genovart, & Oro, 2007; Wise, 1979]), how foraging niche shift shapes species distribution during phases of range expansion has poorly been studied (Skórka, Lenda, Martyka, & Tworek, 2009). In 2009, a colony set up at the saltpans of Pesquiers, 145 km east from the previous eastern sites of Salin-de-Giraud saltpans (Figure 1)

| MATERIAL AND METHODS
| Ethics statement
Findings
| DISCUSSION

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