Seabirds often spend time on the water in the vicinity of their breeding colonies at the start or end of foraging trips, which may be for bathing, social interaction, information transfer, or to reduce predation risk for small petrels that prefer to return to land in darkness. Although such behaviour (hereafter rafting) is common, there are few data on variation in its incidence or timing across species, or analyses of relationships with intrinsic or extrinsic factors such as breeding stage (reflecting central-place foraging constraints) or weather. Here, we use GPS and immersion data collected over multiple years at Bird Island, South Georgia, to investigate rafting behaviour of four albatross and one burrow-nesting petrel species. Nearly ...
Recent improvements in biotelemetry and analytical methods have increased our understanding of the a...
Seabirds are described as birds that rely on the marine environment for food resources, they spend ...
In the dynamic marine environment, highly mobile predators are expected to select profitable forag...
Despite the recent burgeoning in predator tracking studies, few report on seabird activity patterns,...
Tracking studies of seabirds have generally focused in identifying areas used for foraging, in the ...
Divergent foraging strategies may emerge within a population due to a combination of physiological a...
1. A wide range of instrumentation has been deployed on albatrosses and petrels at Bird Island, Sout...
The South Pacific Gyre is the world’s largest expanse of oligotrophic ocean and supports communities...
Divergent foraging strategies may emerge within a population due to a combination of physiological a...
The ability to move and forage efficiently plays a major role in determining the fate of individuals...
Before visiting or leaving their remote island colonies, seabirds often engage in a behaviour termed...
Recording animal movements is essential for understanding the distribution of species over time, wit...
Recent bio-logging technology and associated techniques have uncovered the distribution, behaviour, ...
Most seabirds breed colonially, at which time they make central-place foraging trips. Parents must c...
Capsule Three quarters of tracked Northern Gannets (Morus bassanus) at Grassholm gathered in rafts a...
Recent improvements in biotelemetry and analytical methods have increased our understanding of the a...
Seabirds are described as birds that rely on the marine environment for food resources, they spend ...
In the dynamic marine environment, highly mobile predators are expected to select profitable forag...
Despite the recent burgeoning in predator tracking studies, few report on seabird activity patterns,...
Tracking studies of seabirds have generally focused in identifying areas used for foraging, in the ...
Divergent foraging strategies may emerge within a population due to a combination of physiological a...
1. A wide range of instrumentation has been deployed on albatrosses and petrels at Bird Island, Sout...
The South Pacific Gyre is the world’s largest expanse of oligotrophic ocean and supports communities...
Divergent foraging strategies may emerge within a population due to a combination of physiological a...
The ability to move and forage efficiently plays a major role in determining the fate of individuals...
Before visiting or leaving their remote island colonies, seabirds often engage in a behaviour termed...
Recording animal movements is essential for understanding the distribution of species over time, wit...
Recent bio-logging technology and associated techniques have uncovered the distribution, behaviour, ...
Most seabirds breed colonially, at which time they make central-place foraging trips. Parents must c...
Capsule Three quarters of tracked Northern Gannets (Morus bassanus) at Grassholm gathered in rafts a...
Recent improvements in biotelemetry and analytical methods have increased our understanding of the a...
Seabirds are described as birds that rely on the marine environment for food resources, they spend ...
In the dynamic marine environment, highly mobile predators are expected to select profitable forag...