Abstract

Climate change is altering the marine environment at a global scale, with some of the most dramatic changes occurring in Arctic regions. These changes may affect the distribution and migration patterns of marine species throughout the annual cycle. Species distribution models have provided detailed understanding of the responses of terrestrial species to climate changes, often based on observational data; biologging offers the opportunity to extend those models to migratory marine species that occur in marine environments where direct observation is difficult. We used species distribution modelling and tracking data to model past changes in the non-breeding distribution of thick-billed murres Uria lomvia from a colony in Hudson Bay, Canada, between 1982 and 2019. The predicted distribution of murres shifted during fall and winter. The largest shifts have occurred for fall migration, with range shits of 211 km west and 50 km north per decade, compared with a 29 km shift west per decade in winter. Regions of range expansions had larger declines in sea ice cover, smaller increases in sea surface temperature, and larger increases in air temperature than regions where the range was stable or declining. Murres migrate in and out of Hudson Bay as ice forms each fall and melts each spring. Habitat in Hudson Bay has become available later into the fall and earlier in the spring, such that habitat in Hudson Bay was available for 21 d longer in 2019 than in 1982. Clearly, marine climate is altering the distribution and annual cycle of migratory marine species that occur in areas with seasonal ice cover.

Highlights

  • Climate change is altering the marine environment worldwide (Hoegh-Guldberg & Bruno 2010), changing the phenology and distribution of marine flora and fauna (Poloczanska et al 2013)

  • sea surface temperature (SST), air temperature, and ice cover were important climate variables within our SDM, which accurately predicted the distribution of murres during the non-breeding period

  • Range expansion was associated with declining sea ice cover and warmer air temperatures, while range contraction was associated with increasing SST

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change is altering the marine environment worldwide (Hoegh-Guldberg & Bruno 2010), changing the phenology and distribution of marine flora and fauna (Poloczanska et al 2013). Mar Ecol Prog Ser 679: 163–179, 2021 tat use and phenology change through the annual cycle, to understand how climate change is affecting Arctic marine life. Ice cover and ocean temperature are important factors determining the large-scale distributions and abundance of marine species (Perry et al 2005, Post et al 2013). Ocean warming could have significant effects on the survival and reproductive success of many polar seabird species, through changes in the distribution, abundance, and availability or their prey (Croxall 2002, Sydeman et al 2015)

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