Abstract

During the breeding season seabirds are constrained to coastal areas and are restricted in their movements, spending much of their time in near-shore waters either loafing or foraging. However, in using these areas they may be threatened by anthropogenic activities such as fishing, watersports and coastal developments including marine renewable energy installations. Although many studies describe large scale interactions between seabirds and the environment, the drivers behind near-shore, fine-scale distributions are not well understood. For example, Alderney is an important breeding ground for many species of seabird and has a diversity of human uses of the marine environment, thus providing an ideal location to investigate the near-shore fine-scale interactions between seabirds and the environment. We used vantage point observations of seabird distribution, collected during the 2013 breeding season in order to identify and quantify some of the environmental variables affecting the near-shore, fine-scale distribution of seabirds in Alderney’s coastal waters. We validate the models with observation data collected in 2014 and show that water depth, distance to the intertidal zone, and distance to the nearest seabird nest are key predictors in the distribution of Alderney’s seabirds. AUC values for each species suggest that these models perform well, although the model for shags performed better than those for auks and gulls. While further unexplained underlying localised variation in the environmental conditions will undoubtedly effect the fine-scale distribution of seabirds in near-shore waters we demonstrate the potential of this approach in marine planning and decision making.

Highlights

  • Seabirds are primarily suited to life at sea, during the breeding season they are constrained to coastal areas, often breeding in large colonies, and rafting and foraging in the coastal waters adjacent to breeding sites [1]

  • The near-shore, fine-scale distribution of all three groups of seabirds which make up the majority of the birds observed around Alderney can be partially explained by distance to the nearest seabird nest, distance to the intertidal zone and depth (Table 2)

  • Presence-absence models show that the near-shore, fine-scale distribution of seabirds in Alderney’s coastal waters can partially be explained by distance to the intertidal zone, distance to the nearest seabird nest, depth and substrate type

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Seabirds are primarily suited to life at sea, during the breeding season they are constrained to coastal areas, often breeding in large colonies, and rafting and foraging in the coastal waters adjacent to breeding sites [1]. The potential for negative interactions between humans and seabirds is acute in coastal areas, since seabirds have to use these areas and human activities are concentrated in near-shore locations [2]. Severity of effects is well documented for some interactions [5,6] and less well understood for others [7,8]. Exposure to activities requires an understanding of the factors driving distributions of seabirds in space and time

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call