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Reproductive success of kittiwakes and murres in sequential stages of the nesting period: Relationships with diet and oceanography

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Title Reproductive success of kittiwakes and murres in sequential stages of the nesting period: Relationships with diet and oceanography
Names Renner, Heather M. (creator)
Drummond, Brie A. (creator)
Benson, Anna-Marie (creator)
Paredes, Rosana (creator)
Date Issued 2014-11 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Elsevier and can be found at: http://www.journals.elsevier.com/deep-sea-research-part-ii-topical-studies-in-oceanography.
Abstract Reproductive success is one of the most easily-measured and widely studied demographic parameters of
colonial nesting seabirds. Nevertheless, factors affecting the sequential stages (egg laying, incubation, chick-rearing)
of reproductive success are less understood. We investigated the separate sequential stages
of reproductive success in piscivorous black-legged kittiwakes (Rissa tridactyla) and thick-billed murres
(Uria lomvia) using a 36-year dataset (1975–2010) on the major Pribilof Islands (St. Paul and St. George),
which have recently had contrasting population trajectories. Our objectives were to evaluate how the
proportion of successful nests varied among stages, and to quantify factors influencing the probability of nest
success at each stage in each island. We modeled the probability of nest success at each stage using General
Linear Mixed Models incorporating broad-scale and local climate variables, and diet as covariates as well as
other measures of reproduction such as timing of breeding and reproductive output in the previous year and
previous stage. For both species we found: (1) Success in previous stages of the breeding cycle and success in
the prior year better explained overall success than any environmental variables. Phenology was also an
important predictor of laying success for kittiwakes. (2) Fledging success was lower when chick diets
contained oceanic fish found farther from the colonies and small invertebrates, rather than coastal fish
species. (3) Differences in reproductive variables at St. Paul and St. George islands did not correspond to
population trends between the two islands. Our results highlight the potential importance of adult condition
and annual survival to kittiwake and murre productivity and ultimately, populations. Adult condition
carrying over from the previous year ultimately seems to drive annual breeding success in a cascade effect.
Furthermore, condition and survival appear to be important contributors to population dynamics at each
island. Therefore, adult condition and survival prior to breeding, and factors that influence these parameters
such as foraging conditions in the non-breeding season, may be important datasets for understanding
drivers of seabird demography at the Pribilof Islands.
Genre Article
Topic Marine birds
Identifier Renner, H. M., Drummond, B. A., Benson, A. M., & Paredes, R. (2014). Reproductive success of kittiwakes and murres in sequential stages of the nesting period: Relationships with diet and oceanography. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 109, 251-265. doi:10.1016/j.dsr2.2014.03.006

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