Abstract

Many closely related seabirds nest in mixed colonies, and this association may result in interspecific interactions such as competition for common resources and kleptoparasitism. Trophic interactions were evaluated between the Kelp Gull (Larus dominicanus Lichtenstein, 1823) and Royal and Cayenne terns (Thalasseus maximus maximus (Boddaert, 1783) and Thalasseus sandvicensis eurygnathus (Saunders, 1876), respectively) nesting at a mixed-species colony in an area with high availability of recreational fishery waste for the opportunistic Kelp Gull. Diet analyses were based on gull chick stomach content samples and direct observations of food delivered to tern chicks in 2013 and 2014, complemented in 2014 with carbon and nitrogen stable isotope analysis of chick whole-blood samples. Main prey species of Kelp Gull chicks were Cynoscion guatucupa (Cuvier, 1830), a demersal species obtained from recreational fishery waste, Argentine anchovies (Engraulis anchoita Hubbs and Marini, 1935), and insects. Engraulis anchoita and Odontesthes spp. were the main prey of both tern species. Trophic niche and isotopic niche overlap between the Kelp Gull and Royal and Cayenne terns was low. Kelp Gull kleptoparasitism on Royal and Cayenne terns was ≤2.5% and <0.6%, respectively. The use of anthropogenic food subsidies by Kelp Gulls may be mediating the trophic relationships among species, favouring their use of predictable and abundant fishery waste over a more unpredictable pelagic schooling fish such as E. anchoita.

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