Endemic shearwaters are increasing in the Mediterranean in relation to factors that are closely related to human activities

The aim of this study was to estimate global population trends of abundance of two endemic migratory seabird species breeding in the Mediterranean Sea, Balearic and Scopoli's shearwaters, from migration counts at the Strait of Gibraltar. Specifically, we assessed how regional environmental cond...

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Main Authors: Beatriz Martín, Alejandro Onrubia, Miguel Ferrer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-10-01
Series:Global Ecology and Conservation
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989419301878
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spelling doaj-ae6d26ba8399424a964e9735f7c298362020-11-25T01:18:41ZengElsevierGlobal Ecology and Conservation2351-98942019-10-0120Endemic shearwaters are increasing in the Mediterranean in relation to factors that are closely related to human activitiesBeatriz Martín0Alejandro Onrubia1Miguel Ferrer2Fundación Migres, CIMA, ctra. N-340, Km.85, Tarifa, E-11380, Cádiz, Spain; Corresponding author.Fundación Migres, CIMA, ctra. N-340, Km.85, Tarifa, E-11380, Cádiz, SpainApplied Ecology Group, Doñana Biological Station, CSIC, Seville, SpainThe aim of this study was to estimate global population trends of abundance of two endemic migratory seabird species breeding in the Mediterranean Sea, Balearic and Scopoli's shearwaters, from migration counts at the Strait of Gibraltar. Specifically, we assessed how regional environmental conditions (i.e. sea surface temperature, chlorophyll a concentration, NAO index and fish catches), as proxies of climate change, prey availability and human-induced mortality factors, modulate the interannual variation in shearwater numbers. The change in the migratory population size of both shearwater species was estimated by fitting Generalized Additive Models (GAM) to the annual counts against the year of observation. Specifically, we modelled daily counts of migrant shearwaters during the post-breeding season. Contrary to current estimates at breeding colonies, coastal-land based counts of migrating birds provide evidence that Baleric and Scopoli's shearwaters have been recently increasing in the Mediterranean Sea. Our results highlight that demographic patterns in these species are complex and non-linear, suggesting that most of the increases have happened recently and intimately bounded to environmental factors, such as chlorophyll concentration and fisheries, that are closely related to human activities. Counts of migrating birds at strategic coastal points may provide useful estimates of the global population trend, as well as an efficient and rapid assessment of these and other seabird species in the Mediterranean. Keywords: Chlorophyll, Climate change, Fisheries, Seabird, Monitoringhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989419301878
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Beatriz Martín
Alejandro Onrubia
Miguel Ferrer
spellingShingle Beatriz Martín
Alejandro Onrubia
Miguel Ferrer
Endemic shearwaters are increasing in the Mediterranean in relation to factors that are closely related to human activities
Global Ecology and Conservation
author_facet Beatriz Martín
Alejandro Onrubia
Miguel Ferrer
author_sort Beatriz Martín
title Endemic shearwaters are increasing in the Mediterranean in relation to factors that are closely related to human activities
title_short Endemic shearwaters are increasing in the Mediterranean in relation to factors that are closely related to human activities
title_full Endemic shearwaters are increasing in the Mediterranean in relation to factors that are closely related to human activities
title_fullStr Endemic shearwaters are increasing in the Mediterranean in relation to factors that are closely related to human activities
title_full_unstemmed Endemic shearwaters are increasing in the Mediterranean in relation to factors that are closely related to human activities
title_sort endemic shearwaters are increasing in the mediterranean in relation to factors that are closely related to human activities
publisher Elsevier
series Global Ecology and Conservation
issn 2351-9894
publishDate 2019-10-01
description The aim of this study was to estimate global population trends of abundance of two endemic migratory seabird species breeding in the Mediterranean Sea, Balearic and Scopoli's shearwaters, from migration counts at the Strait of Gibraltar. Specifically, we assessed how regional environmental conditions (i.e. sea surface temperature, chlorophyll a concentration, NAO index and fish catches), as proxies of climate change, prey availability and human-induced mortality factors, modulate the interannual variation in shearwater numbers. The change in the migratory population size of both shearwater species was estimated by fitting Generalized Additive Models (GAM) to the annual counts against the year of observation. Specifically, we modelled daily counts of migrant shearwaters during the post-breeding season. Contrary to current estimates at breeding colonies, coastal-land based counts of migrating birds provide evidence that Baleric and Scopoli's shearwaters have been recently increasing in the Mediterranean Sea. Our results highlight that demographic patterns in these species are complex and non-linear, suggesting that most of the increases have happened recently and intimately bounded to environmental factors, such as chlorophyll concentration and fisheries, that are closely related to human activities. Counts of migrating birds at strategic coastal points may provide useful estimates of the global population trend, as well as an efficient and rapid assessment of these and other seabird species in the Mediterranean. Keywords: Chlorophyll, Climate change, Fisheries, Seabird, Monitoring
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989419301878
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