Abstract

Dietary specialization, exploiting a small fraction of available food resources, is commonly reported for gulls and skuas. Predation of birds by these species is usually considered a specialist strategy employed by the minority of the population but non-specialists also predate birds and may actually have a greater impact on the prey species. To date, most studies have focused on predatory bird-specialists, down-playing the possible importance of opportunistic predation by non-specialists. We addressed this by studying diet (regurgitated pellets and prey remains) and behavior of breeding Herring Gulls (Larus argentatus) over three summers at Gull Island, a mixed-species breeding colony in Lake Ontario. One-third of all pellets analyzed contained bird remains, primarily the most numerous breeding bird: Ring-billed Gull (L. delawarensis) chicks (51%) and adults (36%). Although all but one pair of Herring Gulls ate birds, all pairs maintained broad and mostly similar diets, with birds accounting for at most one-third of prey. Behavior also indicated that Herring Gulls at Gull Island were not predatory bird-specialists because predation was too infrequent to meet energetic requirements, was largely unsuccessful and was only ever observed when Ring-billed Gulls strayed into Herring Gull breeding territories. Instead, bird predation appeared mainly opportunistic, increasing with seasonal availability, access to shoreline, proximity to nesting Ring-billed Gulls and breeding territory size. Compared with predatory specialist Herring Gulls in the same region, individuals that predated birds at Gull Island did not display specialist behaviors and killed six times fewer birds (0.1–0.4 per day, on average) but were over 20 times more numerous (98% of the population versus 4%). Thus, our results indicate that opportunistic predation by non-specialists may have important consequences for prey species. Since opportunistic predation cannot be effectively managed using techniques widely advocated for specialist predators, it is essential to investigate cause of predation by large gulls prior to lethal management.

Highlights

  • Specialist predators have a narrow dietary niche, exploiting a small fraction of available resources, often more efficiently than generalists that utilize a wider range of prey [1]

  • Predatory impact (Ring-billed Gulls killed per Herring Gull pair per d) inferred from the number of Ring-billed Gull carcasses found in Herring Gull territories was 0.41 in 2009 and 0.10 in 2015

  • Our analyses of diet and behavior revealed that predation of Ring-billed Gulls by Herring Gulls was opportunistic at Gull Island and not a specialist strategy

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Summary

Introduction

Specialist predators have a narrow dietary niche, exploiting a small fraction of available resources, often more efficiently than generalists that utilize a wider range of prey [1]. Individual dietary specialization has been widely reported for seabirds, most commonly among Charadriiform species, of which large gulls Larus spp. or skuas Stercorarius spp., account for greater than 60% of records [7]. These two genera of birds often occupy similar upper trophic niches at mixed-species colonies, where they scavenge, feed on marine and terrestrial prey or predate other birds [8,9]. Predation of birds is commonly described as one specialist strategy employed by a small subset of individual large gulls and skuas, comprising from ~2–4% [10,11] to at most 14–20% [12,13,14] of individuals within the population. Non-specialists, may predate birds and, because they comprise the majority of the breeding population, their overall impact on the prey species may be greater than that of specialist individuals [15]

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