Abstract

Interactions between yellow-legged Larus cachinnans and Audouin´s Larus audouinii gulls and fisheries operating around the Chafarinas Islands, located 4.5 km off the Moroccan Mediterranean coast, are reviewed. At the Chafarinas archipelago two distinct types of fisheries operate: trawlers and purse seines. Gulls take advantage of both fisheries. They scavenge trawler discards and congregate around shoals of fish attracted to the surface by the purse-seine lamps. When both trawlers and purse-seine boats are in operation, the diet of both gull species is similar, with epipelagic fish accounting for over 60% of the biomass, partially collected in association with the purse-seine fishery. When only trawlers operated yellow-legged gulls, but not Audouin´s gulls, augmented their diet mainly with human waste from refuse dumps, suggesting that competition for food between the two species is mainly limited to the periods when resources made available by fishery activities are abundant. Likewise, when only trawlers operated, there was an increase in the predation pressure on eggs and chicks of Audouin´s gulls. In particular, during the week of celebrations for the holy lamb festival when neither fishery operated, egg losses of Audouin´s gull increased dramatically, suggesting that severe food shortage caused by the cessation of fishing can result in an increased predation pressure by yellow-legged gulls, affecting Audouin´s gull productivity. These results suggest a novel socio-ecological link between gulls, fisheries and local feasts.

Highlights

  • Sea, which greatly facilitates competition and interactions between the two species

  • At the Chafarinas Islands, the increase in yellow-legged gulls has coincided with a decline in Audouin’s gull numbers, and this resulted in a culling program at this site from 1987 to 1993 (Alvarez, 1992)

  • Chafarinas is a volcanic archipelago composed of three small islands located 3.5 km off the Moroccan Mediterranean coast and 46 km east of Melilla city

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Summary

Introduction

Islands, both species form breeding colonies adjacent to each other. Yellow-legged gulls have undergone a widespread population increase in the western Mediterranean during the last decades, causing diverse detrimental effects on fauna and flora (Vidal et al, 1998). At the Chafarinas Islands, the increase in yellow-legged gulls has coincided with a decline in Audouin’s gull numbers, and this resulted in a culling program at this site from 1987 to 1993. This programme apparently reversed the population trends for both species, so that by 1994 numbers of Audouin’s gulls were double those of yellow-legged gulls (Fig. 1). The yellow-legged gull colony has increased steadily until the present. Trawling, have been shown to affect diet, activity patterns and reproductive parameters of Audouin’s gulls at the

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