Consistent concentrations of critically endangered Balearic shearwaters in UK waters revealed by at‐sea surveys

Abstract Aim Europe's only globally critically endangered seabird, the Balearic shearwater (Puffinus mauretanicus), is thought to have expanded its postbreeding range northwards into UK waters, though its at sea distribution there is not yet well understood. This study aims to identify environm...

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Main Authors: Jessica Ann Phillips, Alex N. Banks, Mark Bolton, Tom Brereton, Pierre Cazenave, Natasha Gillies, Oliver Padget, Jeroen van der Kooij, James Waggitt, Tim Guilford
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-02-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7059
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spelling doaj-981bd4141796498aa150afb142d33e922021-04-02T21:31:38ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582021-02-011141544155710.1002/ece3.7059Consistent concentrations of critically endangered Balearic shearwaters in UK waters revealed by at‐sea surveysJessica Ann Phillips0Alex N. Banks1Mark Bolton2Tom Brereton3Pierre Cazenave4Natasha Gillies5Oliver Padget6Jeroen van der Kooij7James Waggitt8Tim Guilford9Department of Zoology Oxford University Oxford UKNatural England Exeter UKRSPB Centre for Conservation Science Royal Society for the Protection of Birds Sandy, Beds UKMARINElife Northampton UKPlymouth Marine Laboratory Plymouth UKDepartment of Zoology Oxford University Oxford UKDepartment of Zoology Oxford University Oxford UKCentre for Environment, Fisheries & Aquatic Science (Cefas) Lowestoft UKSchool of Ocean Sciences Bangor University Menai Bridge UKDepartment of Zoology Oxford University Oxford UKAbstract Aim Europe's only globally critically endangered seabird, the Balearic shearwater (Puffinus mauretanicus), is thought to have expanded its postbreeding range northwards into UK waters, though its at sea distribution there is not yet well understood. This study aims to identify environmental factors associated with the species’ presence, map the probability of presence of the species across the western English Channel and southern Celtic Sea, and estimate the number of individuals in this area. Location The western English Channel and southern Celtic Sea. Methods This study analyses strip transect data collected between 2013 and 2017 from vessel‐based surveys in the western English Channel and southern Celtic Sea during the Balearic shearwater's postbreeding period. Using environmental data collected directly and from remote sensors both Generalized Additive Models and the Random Forest machine learning model were used to determine shearwater presence at different locations. Abundance was estimated separately using a density multiplication approach. Results Both models indicated that oceanographic features were better predictors of shearwater presence than fish abundance. Seafloor aspect, sea surface temperature, depth, salinity, and maximum current speed were the most important predictors. The estimated number of Balearic shearwaters in the prediction area ranged from 652 birds in 2017 to 6,904 birds in 2014. Main conclusions Areas with consistently high probabilities of shearwater presence were identified at the Celtic Sea front. Our estimates suggest that the study area in southwest Britain supports between 2% and 23% of the global population of Balearic shearwaters. Based on the timing of the surveys (mainly in October), it is probable that most of the sighted shearwaters were immatures. This study provides the most complete understanding of Balearic shearwater distribution in UK waters available to date, information that will help inform any future conservation actions concerning this endangered species.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7059Balearic shearwatercritically endangereddistributiongeneralized additive modelrandom forestseabird
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jessica Ann Phillips
Alex N. Banks
Mark Bolton
Tom Brereton
Pierre Cazenave
Natasha Gillies
Oliver Padget
Jeroen van der Kooij
James Waggitt
Tim Guilford
spellingShingle Jessica Ann Phillips
Alex N. Banks
Mark Bolton
Tom Brereton
Pierre Cazenave
Natasha Gillies
Oliver Padget
Jeroen van der Kooij
James Waggitt
Tim Guilford
Consistent concentrations of critically endangered Balearic shearwaters in UK waters revealed by at‐sea surveys
Ecology and Evolution
Balearic shearwater
critically endangered
distribution
generalized additive model
random forest
seabird
author_facet Jessica Ann Phillips
Alex N. Banks
Mark Bolton
Tom Brereton
Pierre Cazenave
Natasha Gillies
Oliver Padget
Jeroen van der Kooij
James Waggitt
Tim Guilford
author_sort Jessica Ann Phillips
title Consistent concentrations of critically endangered Balearic shearwaters in UK waters revealed by at‐sea surveys
title_short Consistent concentrations of critically endangered Balearic shearwaters in UK waters revealed by at‐sea surveys
title_full Consistent concentrations of critically endangered Balearic shearwaters in UK waters revealed by at‐sea surveys
title_fullStr Consistent concentrations of critically endangered Balearic shearwaters in UK waters revealed by at‐sea surveys
title_full_unstemmed Consistent concentrations of critically endangered Balearic shearwaters in UK waters revealed by at‐sea surveys
title_sort consistent concentrations of critically endangered balearic shearwaters in uk waters revealed by at‐sea surveys
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Aim Europe's only globally critically endangered seabird, the Balearic shearwater (Puffinus mauretanicus), is thought to have expanded its postbreeding range northwards into UK waters, though its at sea distribution there is not yet well understood. This study aims to identify environmental factors associated with the species’ presence, map the probability of presence of the species across the western English Channel and southern Celtic Sea, and estimate the number of individuals in this area. Location The western English Channel and southern Celtic Sea. Methods This study analyses strip transect data collected between 2013 and 2017 from vessel‐based surveys in the western English Channel and southern Celtic Sea during the Balearic shearwater's postbreeding period. Using environmental data collected directly and from remote sensors both Generalized Additive Models and the Random Forest machine learning model were used to determine shearwater presence at different locations. Abundance was estimated separately using a density multiplication approach. Results Both models indicated that oceanographic features were better predictors of shearwater presence than fish abundance. Seafloor aspect, sea surface temperature, depth, salinity, and maximum current speed were the most important predictors. The estimated number of Balearic shearwaters in the prediction area ranged from 652 birds in 2017 to 6,904 birds in 2014. Main conclusions Areas with consistently high probabilities of shearwater presence were identified at the Celtic Sea front. Our estimates suggest that the study area in southwest Britain supports between 2% and 23% of the global population of Balearic shearwaters. Based on the timing of the surveys (mainly in October), it is probable that most of the sighted shearwaters were immatures. This study provides the most complete understanding of Balearic shearwater distribution in UK waters available to date, information that will help inform any future conservation actions concerning this endangered species.
topic Balearic shearwater
critically endangered
distribution
generalized additive model
random forest
seabird
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7059
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