Model of foraging habitat preference for non-locally breeding seabird species in and near Cordell Bank and Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuaries.

Jun 6, 2017 (Last modified Jun 23, 2021)
Uploaded by Julie Howar
Dataset was used in a scientifically peer-reviewed publication
Description:

Seabird aggregations at sea have been shown to be associated with concentrations of prey. Previous research identified Central California as a highly used foraging area for seabirds, with locally breeding seabirds foraging close to their colonies on Southeast Farallon Island. Herein, we focus on nonresident (i.e. non-locally breeding) seabird species off of Central California. We hypothesized that high-use foraging areas for nonresident seabirds would be influenced by oceanographic and bathymetric factors and that spatial and temporal distributions would be similar within planktivorous and generalist foraging guilds but would differ between them. With data collected by the Applied California Current Ecosystem Studies (ACCESS) partnership during cruises between April and October from 2004-2013, we developed generalized linear models to identify high-use foraging areas for each of six nonresident seabird species. The four generalist species are Phoebastria nigripes (black-footed albatross), Ardenna griseus (sooty shearwater), Ardenna creatopus (pink-footed shearwater), and Fulmarus glacialis (northern fulmar). The two planktivorous species are Phalaropus lobatus (red-necked phalarope) and Phalaropus fulicarius (red phalarope). Sea surface temperature was significant for generalist species and sea surface salinity was important for planktivorous species. The distance to the 200-m isobath was significant in five of six models, Pacific Decadal Oscillation with a 3-month lag in four models, and sea surface fluorescence, the distance to Cordell Bank, and depth in three models. We did not find statistically significant differences between distributions of individual seabird species within a foraging guild or between guilds, with the exception of the sooty shearwater. Model results for a multi-use seabird foraging area highlighted the continental shelf break, particularly within the vicinity of Cordell Bank, as the highest use areas as did Marxan prioritization. Our research methods can be implemented elsewhere to identify critical habitat that needs protection as human development pressures continue to expand to the ocean.

Data Provided By:
Point Blue Conservation Science
Content date:
2004-05-01T00:00:00 - 2013-09-30T00:00:00
Citation:
Studwell AJ, Hines E, Elliott ML, Howar J, Holzman B, Nur N, et al. (2017) Modeling Nonresident Seabird Foraging Distributions to Inform Ocean Zoning in Central California. PLoS ONE 12(1): e0169517. doi:10.1371/journal. pone.0169517
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Point Blue Conservation Science
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Contact Point Blue Conservation Science before sharing these data. Please refer to our data sharing policy at http://data.prbo.org/cadc2/index.php?page=prbo-data-sharing-policy. Users are prohibited from any commercial, non-free resale, or redistribution without explicit written permission from Point Blue Conservation Science. Users should acknowledge Point Blue Conservation Science as the source used in the creation of any reports, publications, new datasets, derived products, or services resulting from the use of this dataset. Point Blue Conservation Science also requests reprints of any publications and notification of any redistributing efforts.
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About the Uploader

Julie Howar
with Point Blue Conservation Science

Seabird biologist and GIS specialist.