Reproductive Consequences of Nest Site Use in Fork-tailed Storm-Petrels in the Aleutian Islands, Alaska: Potential Lasting Effects of an Introduced Predator

We examined the reproductive consequences of differential nest site use in Fork-tailed Storm-Petrels (Oceanodroma furcata) in the Aleutian Islands, Alaska, where birds on islands where foxes were introduced nest in rocky substrate rather than in typical soil habitat. We investigated how physical and...

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Main Authors: Brie A. Drummond, Marty L. Leonard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2010-12-01
Series:Avian Conservation and Ecology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ace-eco.org/vol5/iss2/art4/
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spelling doaj-8b2a7702ce5845d0a591a89606eb25302020-11-25T00:53:01ZengResilience AllianceAvian Conservation and Ecology1712-65682010-12-0152410.5751/ACE-00414-050204414Reproductive Consequences of Nest Site Use in Fork-tailed Storm-Petrels in the Aleutian Islands, Alaska: Potential Lasting Effects of an Introduced PredatorBrie A. Drummond0Marty L. Leonard1Department of Biology, Dalhousie UniversityDepartment of Biology, Dalhousie UniversityWe examined the reproductive consequences of differential nest site use in Fork-tailed Storm-Petrels (Oceanodroma furcata) in the Aleutian Islands, Alaska, where birds on islands where foxes were introduced nest in rocky substrate rather than in typical soil habitat. We investigated how physical and microclimatic nest site characteristics influenced storm-petrel breeding success 20 years after fox removal. We then examined whether those nest site characteristics that affected success were related to the amount of rock that composed the nest. In both years of our study, nest temperature had the strongest influence on chick survival and overall reproductive success, appearing in all the top models and alone explaining 14-35% of the variation in chick survival. The relationship between reproductive success and nest temperature was positive in both years, with higher survival in warmer nests. In turn, the best predictor of nest temperature was the amount of rock that composed the site. Rockier nests had colder average temperatures, which were driven by lower daily minimum temperatures, compared to nests with more soil. Thus, the rockiness of the nest site appeared to affect chick survival and overall reproductive success through its influence on nest temperature. This study suggests that the use of rocky nest sites, presumed to be a result of historic predation from introduced foxes, could decrease breeding success in this recovering population, and thus be a long-lasting effect of introduced predators.http://www.ace-eco.org/vol5/iss2/art4/Aleutian Islandsbreeding successchick survivalhabitatintroduced predator</span>Oceanodroma furcata<span class="proof_keywords">nest site characteristicsnest temperaturereproductive successstorm-petrel
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brie A. Drummond
Marty L. Leonard
spellingShingle Brie A. Drummond
Marty L. Leonard
Reproductive Consequences of Nest Site Use in Fork-tailed Storm-Petrels in the Aleutian Islands, Alaska: Potential Lasting Effects of an Introduced Predator
Avian Conservation and Ecology
Aleutian Islands
breeding success
chick survival
habitat
introduced predator
</span>Oceanodroma furcata<span class="proof_keywords">
nest site characteristics
nest temperature
reproductive success
storm-petrel
author_facet Brie A. Drummond
Marty L. Leonard
author_sort Brie A. Drummond
title Reproductive Consequences of Nest Site Use in Fork-tailed Storm-Petrels in the Aleutian Islands, Alaska: Potential Lasting Effects of an Introduced Predator
title_short Reproductive Consequences of Nest Site Use in Fork-tailed Storm-Petrels in the Aleutian Islands, Alaska: Potential Lasting Effects of an Introduced Predator
title_full Reproductive Consequences of Nest Site Use in Fork-tailed Storm-Petrels in the Aleutian Islands, Alaska: Potential Lasting Effects of an Introduced Predator
title_fullStr Reproductive Consequences of Nest Site Use in Fork-tailed Storm-Petrels in the Aleutian Islands, Alaska: Potential Lasting Effects of an Introduced Predator
title_full_unstemmed Reproductive Consequences of Nest Site Use in Fork-tailed Storm-Petrels in the Aleutian Islands, Alaska: Potential Lasting Effects of an Introduced Predator
title_sort reproductive consequences of nest site use in fork-tailed storm-petrels in the aleutian islands, alaska: potential lasting effects of an introduced predator
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Avian Conservation and Ecology
issn 1712-6568
publishDate 2010-12-01
description We examined the reproductive consequences of differential nest site use in Fork-tailed Storm-Petrels (Oceanodroma furcata) in the Aleutian Islands, Alaska, where birds on islands where foxes were introduced nest in rocky substrate rather than in typical soil habitat. We investigated how physical and microclimatic nest site characteristics influenced storm-petrel breeding success 20 years after fox removal. We then examined whether those nest site characteristics that affected success were related to the amount of rock that composed the nest. In both years of our study, nest temperature had the strongest influence on chick survival and overall reproductive success, appearing in all the top models and alone explaining 14-35% of the variation in chick survival. The relationship between reproductive success and nest temperature was positive in both years, with higher survival in warmer nests. In turn, the best predictor of nest temperature was the amount of rock that composed the site. Rockier nests had colder average temperatures, which were driven by lower daily minimum temperatures, compared to nests with more soil. Thus, the rockiness of the nest site appeared to affect chick survival and overall reproductive success through its influence on nest temperature. This study suggests that the use of rocky nest sites, presumed to be a result of historic predation from introduced foxes, could decrease breeding success in this recovering population, and thus be a long-lasting effect of introduced predators.
topic Aleutian Islands
breeding success
chick survival
habitat
introduced predator
</span>Oceanodroma furcata<span class="proof_keywords">
nest site characteristics
nest temperature
reproductive success
storm-petrel
url http://www.ace-eco.org/vol5/iss2/art4/
work_keys_str_mv AT brieadrummond reproductiveconsequencesofnestsiteuseinforktailedstormpetrelsinthealeutianislandsalaskapotentiallastingeffectsofanintroducedpredator
AT martylleonard reproductiveconsequencesofnestsiteuseinforktailedstormpetrelsinthealeutianislandsalaskapotentiallastingeffectsofanintroducedpredator
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