MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIESMar Ecol Prog Ser
Vol. 520: 257267, 2015doi: 10.3354/meps11080
Published February 3
INTRODUCTION
The principle of competitive exclusion, a basic tenetof ecology, states that complete competitors cannotcoexist (Gauze 1934, Hutchinson 1959, Schoener1974). That is, the n-dimensional niche hyper-volumebetween any 2 sympatric (and therefore competing)species must differ (Macarthur 1958, Hutchinson1959, Pianka 1969, Wilson 2010). Nonetheless, manyseabird and marine mammal colonies are character-ized by several co-existing species with apparentlysimilar dietary niches (Diamond 1978, Croxall &Prince 1980, Gaston 2004). Competition is likelystrongest during the reproductive period be cause allindividuals are constrained to feed within a limited
radius of the central place and cannot wander entireoceans searching for an optimal foraging patch (Ash-mole 1963, Gaston et al. 2007). Many cliff- or burrow-nesting seabirds are apparently not limited by nest-sites, and competition must occur at sea (Elliott et al.2009b, Masello et al. 2010, Wakefield et al. 2013),presumably leading to differences in their foragingniches over evolutionary time. In support of this the-ory, sympatric seabird species often have differentforaging strategies (Ishtiaq et al. 2010, Barger &Kitaysky 2012; Table 1).
In northern oceans, several auk species coexist atmany colonies and apparently utilize different forag-ing strategies (Gaston 2004, Elliott et al. 2010b, Thax-ter et al. 2010). For instance, common guillemots Uria
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*Corresponding authors: [email protected]; [email protected]
Foraging behaviour of sympatric razorbills and puffins
Akiko Shoji1,*, Kyle Elliott2, Annette Fayet1, Dave Boyle1, Chris Perrins1, Tim Guilford1,*
1Department of Zoology, Oxford University, Oxford OX1 3PS, UK2Department of Integrative Biology, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada
ABSTRACT: Many marine predators coexist at colonies, creating a zone where there could be sig-nificant inter- and intraspecific competition. To minimize the potential for direct competition,under the principle of competitive exclusion, sympatric predators may differ in their foraging be -haviour at the colony. At Skomer, Wales, razorbills Alca torda and puffins Fratercula arctica bothbreed at the same time of year, forage on sand eels Ammodytes sp. and their populations are sta-ble or declining, meaning that they may be close to carrying capacity and experiencing competi-tion. To examine how they differ in their foraging behaviour, time-depth-temperature recorderswere attached to the legs of chick-rearing individuals of both species. Puffins have lower wing-loading and lower total oxygen stores than razorbills and are therefore expected to invest moretime in flying and less time in diving than razorbills. Mean (1 SE) dive depth was 11.8 0.45 mfor puffins and 8.2 0.21 m for razorbills, while mean dive duration was 40 0.45 s for puffins and24 0.21 s for razorbills. Both species spent most of their dive time making shallow, V-shapeddives during daylight hours. In contrast to our prediction, foraging behaviour was very similarbetween the 2 species, although puffins tended to spend more time both diving and flying. Thehigher diving and flying rates of puffins may be associated with multiple prey loading, as puffinstend to bring back smaller (and therefore more) prey items than do razorbills.
KEY WORDS: Diving behavior Auks Bio-logging Alcids
OPENPEN ACCESSCCESS
Mar Ecol Prog Ser 520: 257267, 2015258
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RESULTS
We retrieved TDRs from 7 puffins Fratercula arc-tica and 7 razorbills Alca torda. All un-retrieved birdswere spotted in the colony after deployment, but wefailed to recapture them. No difference was found inbreeding success between our study birds and con-trol birds that are part of the long-term study runby the Edward Grey Institute at the University ofOxford. In total, we recorded 15 383 dives from razor-bills (n = 7 birds) and 3414 dives from puffins (n = 7birds). Dive duration was longer (t12 = 3.17, p =0.008, GLMM with individual as random effect andtime of day: cos[2 hours since solar midnight] as afixed effect) and dive depth tended to be deeper (t12 =1.90, p = 0.08) for puffins than razorbills (Table 3,Fig. 1). Dive duration was longer (t12 = 4.32, p =0.001, GLMM with individual as random effect anddepth as a fixed effect) and surface interval tended tobe shorter for puffins than for razorbills for a givendive depth (t12 = 2.14, p = 0.05, Fig. 1). More than95% of dives were V-shaped for both species. Puffinsspent 5.7 3.3% of the day flying with average flightduration of 7.47 2.91 min, while razorbills spent 4.9 1.4% of the day flying with average flight durationof 6.45 1.20 min. Including species (razorbill/puffin)did not increase the parsimony for models explainingflight duration (AIC = 1.0). The first 3 principal com-ponents (PC) ex plained >77% of the overall vari-ance, and no other axis explained >10% of the vari-ance (Table 4). Dive depth and number of flights perday loaded heavily and negatively on the first axis,while percentage of time diving loaded heavily andpositively on the second axis (Table 5). Razorbillstended to be associated with a positive first PC axisscore, while puffins tended to be associated with apositive second PC axis score.
260
Shoji et al.: Diving in UK alcids 261
Individual Depth (m) Duration (s) Max. Max. No. of dives No. of dives Bout depth (m) duration (s) per day per bout length (s)
Atlantic puffins515 15.7 12.6 52.2 29.9 47.6 123.1 310 19.6 21.2 1320 1368200 9.8 7.4 33.2 19.8 33.7 90.5 460 25.0 18.1 1023 717152 5.9 3.4 28.0 16.4 23.5 93.7 600 26.6 18.6 1105 8171 7.5 5.9 27.9 19.7 23.9 82.7 416 43.6 28.7 1587 1524523 13.8 11.2 42.6 25.6 37.6 95.5 510 23.6 16.8 1320 771518 12.8 13.5 36.6 27.9 46.4 116.6 283 25.6 26.1 1321 871148 9.7 7.6 57.4 25.4 39.4 105.8 283 11.6 12.8 818 904Mean 11.8 4.2 39.7 11.6 36.0 9.7 101.1 14.6 409 123 25.1 20.3 1213 996
Razorbillsk24763 8.9 6.4 26.1 16.2 56 93 417 17.0 22.1 651 749k24909 5.8 3.7 22.4 10.9 25.1 69.8 448 27.0 33.2 776 946k93793 10.3 5.0 31.1 13.6 25.2 71.4 234 17.1 25.4 839 1172m27931 8.6 4.9 24.1 12.8 26.5 68.2 295 20.0 19.5 724 703m93896 8.2 5.8 22.4 16.0 29.3 64.8 362 14.3 4.5 660 208m93998 6.6 3.2 17.8 10.3 21.6 52.3 511 19.2 26.4 638 759m93924 8.8 5.4 23.5 16.1 31.3 73.4 511 26.3 39.4 1052 1288Mean 8.2 1.5 24.0 4.1 30.7 11.6 70.4 12.1 397 105 20.1 24.4 763 832
Table 3. Dive parameters for Atlantic puffins and razorbills breeding on Skomer, including all dives >2.5 m in depth. Values are (where applicable) mean SD
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Fig. 1. Average (a) depth, (b) duration and (c) number of dives per hour relative to time of day, (d) dive duration relative to divedepth, (e) frequency of dives to different depths and (f) average surface interval duration relative to dive depth, for Atlantic
puffins and razorbills
Mar Ecol Prog Ser 520: 257267, 2015
DISCUSSION
Puffin diving behaviour
Puffin Fratercula arctica dive behaviour was quitesimilar to other non-Uria auk species, consisting pri-marily of many shallow (~5 to 20 m) V-shaped divesduring daylight hours. Not surprisingly, dive depthwas apparently limited by visibility as dive depth wasdeeper during the middle of the day and no diving oc-curred at night (Croll et al. 1992, Regular et al. 2011).The number of dives per hour peaked in the morningand evening, which coincides with the peak in feed-ing rates of offspring by parental puffins at Skomer(Bche et al. 2013). Similar peaks in dive rates afterdawn and before dusk were observed with puffins atthe Isle of May (Wanless et al. 1990, Harris & Wanless2012). We speculate that such a relationship reflects aneed to provide food for the offspring before and afterthe nighttime fasting period and perhaps it requiresmore energy and/or investment to feed.
Puffin dive behaviour at Skomer was quite similarto the dive behaviour elsewhere (Table 1), although
dives were shallower than recorded insome cases by capillary tubes (capillarytubing, closed at one end and dustedwith icing sugar, can be used to deter-mine a single maximum depth over thecourse of deployment based on the maxi -mum distance sea water extends into thetube and dissolves the icing sugar; Kooy-man et al. 1971). Capillary tubes can beinaccurate even over short de ployments,leading to erroneously deep maximumdepths for a species (Elliott & Gaston2009). Nonetheless, our maximum depth(48 m) was deeper than that recorded atour study site using capillary tubes (27 m;
Davidson 1994). Both maximum and average depthof puffins at Skomer was deeper than at Isle of May,perhaps because the bathymetry within the foragingrange of the puffin is generally shallower at Isle ofMay than at Skomer (Fig. A1 in the Appendix). Aver-age dive duration was slightly shorter and maximumduration was slightly longer than predicted based onallometric relationships across all auks (predictedaverage duration: 47 s; predicted maximum duration:114 s; Watanuki & Burger 1999).
Puffins dived on average 409 times per day atSkomer compared with 1148 times per day at the Isleof May (Harris & Wanless 2012). Although averagedive duration at Skomer was longer, the averagehours per day submerged at the Isle of May (7.8 h)was higher than at Skomer (4.6 h). The discrepancy ispartially explained by the timing of deployments, asthe puffins observed at Isle of May included puffinswith older offspring, which likely had higher energydemands necessitating more food and higher diverates (Harris & Wanless 2012). If we assume thatpuffins need to capture 447 sand eels per day to feedtheir young and maintain their own body weight
262
Variable PC1 PC2 PC3
Percent of variance explained 32% 25% 20%Average dive depth 0.490 0.211 0.300Maximum depth 0.393 0.302 0.257Average surface interval duration 0.282 0.278 0.127Residual of dive duration on dive depth 0.375 0.429 0.464Number of dives per day 0.349 0.370Percent time spent diving 0.131 0.656Number of flights per day 0.480 0.441Percent of time spent flying 0.367 0.222 0.526
Table 4. Loadings for principal components analysis of dive behaviourbased on average values for each individual. Loadings < 0.1 are not shown.
The component with the highest loading is shown in bold
Location Depth Duration Instruments Source
Isle of May, Britain 4 (20) Time-depth recorder Harris & Wanless (2012)Isle of May, Britain 30 (114) Radio telemetry Wanless et al. (1988)Isle of May, Britain (33) Capillary tube Wanless et al. (1990)Petit Manaan, Maine 9.7 (40.7) Time-depth recorder Spencer (2012)Newfoundland (60) Fishing nets Piatt & Nettleship (1985)Newfoundland (68) Capillary tube Burger & Simpson (1986)Norway (45) Capillary tube Barrett & Furness (1990)Labrador (41) Capillary tube Baillie (2001)Skomer, Britain (27) Capillary tube Davidson (1994)Skomer, Britain 11.8 (47.6) 9.7 (40.7) Time-depth recorder Our study
Table 5. Dive behaviour of puffins as recorded at different locations and by different instruments. Average values of dive behaviour (maximum values in parentheses) are presented
Shoji et al.: Diving in UK alcids
(details in Harris & Wanless 2012), then, based on ourdata, puffins at Skomer likely catch just over 1 fishper dive, compared with
Mar Ecol Prog Ser 520: 257267, 2015
rapidly attack schooling fish from below (Burger etal. 1993). Capturing shallow prey also means that itis relatively easy to track the movement of fishschools from the surface, either because the schoolis visible from the surface or because large concen-trations of surface-feeding predators indicate theschool (local en hance ment; Porter & Sealy 1982,Davoren et al. 2003, Elliott et al. 2009a). Finally,oxygen stores are unlikely to be substantially re -duced during short dives, necessitating less time atthe surface and therefore a higher proportion of bot-tom time throughout a dive bout (Croll et al. 1992,Elliott et al. 2008). Apparently, there are manyadvantages to shallow-diving in auks, as with theexception of guillemots (Croll et al. 1992, Mehlumet al. 2001, Falk et al. 2002, Paredes et al. 2008,Thaxter et al. 2010), few auks regularly dive beyond15 m in depth despite having the capability to do so(Burger & Powell 1990, Burger et al. 1993, Kuroki etal. 2003, Paredes et al. 2008, Elliott et al. 2010b,Thaxter et al. 2010, Brown et al. 2012).
In many ways, the foraging behaviour ofrazorbills and puffins was remarkablysimilar given their differences in size.Certainly, there was no evidence for theclear segregation in dive behaviour and/or flight time apparent in many other sea-bird assemblages (Table 1). Althoughpuffins dived ~3.5 m deeper, both speciesused almost exclusively V-shaped dives,implying that, unlike bottom-feeding Eu-ropean shags (Wa ta nuki et al. 2008), nei-ther was ob taining sand eels from theocean floor; V-shaped dives are primarilyassociated with capturing prey in mid- water, at least in guillemots (Elliott et al.2008). In contrast, guillemots have manyfewer V-shaped dives than razorbills andpuffins, and they forage substantially onbenthic fish (Paredes et al. 2008). Bothpuffins and ra zor bills bring back multiple,small items to their young, but puffinstended to bring more, smaller items thanrazorbills, and the longer dives by puffinsmay have resulted from capturing multi-ple prey per dive. Thus, it could be ex-pected that puffins have a longer bottomtime at a fixed depth as they capture mul-tiple prey items within a school. However,the similarity in shape as demonstratedby a high proportion of V-shaped dives forboth species and the similar relationshipbetween depth and duration suggests
that there is little bottom time at fixed depth for eitherspecies. Our sample size is relatively small, and ourstudy was conducted only within 1 season. Segrega-tion in behaviour amongst species could perhaps oc-cur in years of low but not high prey availability. Thus,future studies could benefit from evaluating behaviourover a longer period. Also, as we were unable to sexindividuals within our study, and sex is known to playa strong role in determining dive behavior in auks(Paredes et al. 2005, 2008, Thaxter et al. 2009, Elliottet al. 2010a, Stauss et al. 2012), it is possible that somevariation was missed due to unbalanced or missingdata from one sex for either species. Similarly, theconstraints of accessi bility and disturbance to coloniescan be severe, and therefore, we were unable to pickindividuals randomly. In stead, study birds were cho-sen at locations with a history of successful breedingand no obvious anomalies. As breeding locations areknown to affect foraging behaviour (Soanes et al.2014), the potential role of sub-colony variation mayhave been missed.
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Fig. 2. Principal component analysis of foraging behaviour averaged acrosseach individual. Loadings of different parameters are shown as vectorswithin the principal component space. Parameters included were the aver-age surface interval duration, average (mean) dive depth, maximum divedepth, average percentage of day spent flying, average percentage of dayspent diving, average number of dives per day, average residual of dive
duration on depth and average number of flights per day
Shoji et al.: Diving in UK alcids
One potential explanation for the similarity in div-ing behaviour is that since the diet is similar betweenthe 2 species, they may have used similar conspecificor inter-specific cues to locate food and may have for-aged on the same fish shoals. Unlike deep-divingseabirds, puffins feed at low densities on small, low-density shoals of fish near the surface, sometimesassociated with tidal rips (Piatt 1990, Wanless et al.1990, Harris & Wanless 2012). We suggest that razor-bills and puffins may have used similar oceano-graphic cues to feed on similar shoals near Skomer.Another possibility, as shown in guillemots, is thatforaging niche may be differentiated only duringyears of poor food availability (Barger & Kitaysky2012). When considered together in a multivariateframework, it was clear that many of the parameterswere intercorrelated such that the main differenceappeared to be that puffins worked harder thanrazorbills: they dived deeper and spent more timeflying and diving (Fig. 2). Puffins ability to workharder, possibly associated with a 25% lower wing-loading and therefore lower flight costs leaving moreresidual energy to be expended on diving or addi-tional flying, may lead to higher feeding rates andexplain how they can provision their offspring onland for almost twice as long as razorbills.
Acknowledgements. We thank the staff and volunteers ofSkomer, particularly Jennifer Roberts, and Birgitta Bcheand Ed Stubbings (Skomer wardens). We also thank theWildlife Trust for South and West Wales for permission andgenerous in-kind support. A.S. received financial supportthrough Japan Students Services Organization, Merton Col-lege, Department of Zoology at the University of Oxford andthe American Animal Behavior Society, and K.E. receivedan NSERC Postdoctoral Fellowship. All work was conductedafter approval by Natural Resources Wales, the Skomer andStockholm Islands Advisory Committee and the British Trustfor Ornithology (BTO permits: Guilford, 5311; Perrins, 660;Shoji, 5939).
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Fig. A1. Bathymetry maps of puffin colony locations at (A) Isle of May and (B) Skomer Island. Red circle indicates the colonyat Isle of May, and red triangle indicates the colony at Skomer Island. Scale shown is in meters. Average foraging radius is
ca. 8 km and maximum foraging typically 25 km for puffins
Editorial responsibility: Rory Wilson, Swansea, UK
Submitted: July 18, 2014; Accepted: October 15, 2014Proofs received from author(s): January 8, 2015
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