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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Foraging in a dynamic environment: Response of four sympatric sub‐Antarctic albatross species to interannual environmental variability

Ecology and Evolution 2020 32 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Tegan Carpenter‐Kling, Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Ryan R Reisinger, Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Florian Orgeret, Maëlle Connan, Peter G. Ryan Kim L. Stevens, Peter G. Ryan Maëlle Connan, Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Azwianewi B. Makhado, Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Pierre Pistorius, Peter G. Ryan Pierre Pistorius, Peter G. Ryan Ryan R Reisinger, Ryan R Reisinger, Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan Peter G. Ryan

Summary

This study examined how four sub-Antarctic albatross species adjust their foraging strategies in response to year-to-year environmental variability, finding that behavioral flexibility helps them manage food availability while breeding. This ecology paper is not directly related to microplastic research, though seabirds like albatrosses are frequently documented ingesting plastic debris at sea.

Study Type Environmental

Seasonal and annual climate variations are linked to fluctuations in the abundance and distribution of resources, posing a significant challenge to animals that need to adjust their foraging behavior accordingly. Particularly during adverse conditions, and while energetically constrained when breeding, animals ideally need to be flexible in their foraging behavior. Such behavioral plasticity may separate "winners" from "losers" in light of rapid environmental changes due to climate change. Here, the foraging behavior of four sub-Antarctic albatross species was investigated from 2015/16 to 2017/18, a period characterized by pronounced environmental variability. Over three breeding seasons on Marion Island, Prince Edward Archipelago, incubating wandering (WA, <i>Diomedea exulans</i>; <i>n</i> = 45), grey-headed (GHA, <i>Thalassarche chrysostoma</i>; <i>n</i> = 26), sooty (SA, <i>Phoebetria fusca</i>; <i>n</i> = 23), and light-mantled (LMSA, <i>P. palpebrata</i>; <i>n</i> = 22) albatrosses were tracked with GPS loggers. The response of birds to environmental variability was investigated by quantifying interannual changes in their foraging behavior along two axes: spatial distribution, using kernel density analysis, and foraging habitat preference, using generalized additive mixed models and Bayesian mixed models. All four species were shown to respond behaviorally to environmental variability, but with substantial differences in their foraging strategies. WA was most general in its habitat use defined by sea surface height, eddy kinetic energy, wind speed, ocean floor slope, and sea-level anomaly, with individuals foraging in a range of habitats. In contrast, the three smaller albatrosses exploited two main foraging habitats, with habitat use varying between years. Generalist habitat use by WA and interannually variable use of habitats by GHA, SA, and LMSA would likely offer these species some resilience to predicted changes in climate such as warming seas and strengthening of westerly winds. However, future investigations need to consider other life-history stages coupled with demographic studies, to better understand the link between behavioral plasticity and population responses.

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