Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
ICES COOPERATIVE RESEARCH REPORT RAPPORT DES RECHERCHES COLLECTIVES NO. 232 DIETS OF SEABIRDS AND CONSEQUENCES OF CHANGES IN FOOD SUPPLY Edited by Edited by Robert W. Furness Institute of Biomedical and Life Sciences Graham Kerr Building University of Glasgow Glasgow G12 8 QQ UK and Mark L. Tasker Joint Nature Conservation Committee Dunnet House 7 Thistle Place Aberdeen AB10 1 UZ UK International Council for the Exploration of the Sea Conseil International pour l’Exploration de la Mer Palægade 2–4 DK-1261 Copenhagen K May 1999 Denmark ICES Cooperative Research Report No. 232 ISSN 1017–6195 TABLE OF CONTENTS Section Page List of Working Group participants ................................................................................................................................ 1 A review of issues related to seabird consumption of fish and shellfish stocks, discards and mariculture as well as the trophic role and ecology of seabirds and waders G. L. Hunt, W. A. Montevecchi, and M. F. Leopold ............................................................................................... 1.1 1.2 2 2 2 2 3 3 4 4 4 5 Consumption of pre-recruit fish by seabirds and the possible use of this as an indicator of fish stock recruitment S. P. R. Greenstreet, P. H. Becker, R. T. Barrett, P. Fossum, and M. F. Leopold.................................................. 6 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 3 2 Introduction ......................................................................................................................................... Seabirds as indicators.................................................................................................................................... 1.2.1 Seabirds as indicators of prey stocks .............................................................................................. 1.2.2 Seabirds as monitors of pollutants.................................................................................................. Processes affecting the trophic ecology of seabirds ...................................................................................... Seabird and wader interactions with mariculture .......................................................................................... Seabird impacts on recruitment of fish stocks............................................................................................... Mortality of seabirds ..................................................................................................................................... Discards and offal ......................................................................................................................................... References ......................................................................................................................................... 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 2 1 Introduction - background to fish stock assessment...................................................................................... Introduction - background to seabird feeding ecology.................................................................................. Seabirds as samplers of 0-group fish: case studies on cormorants/shags ...................................................... 2.3.1 Shags and saithe, Norway............................................................................................................... 2.3.2 Cormorants and flatfish, Dutch Wadden Sea.................................................................................. Pre-recruit herring and common tern reproduction ....................................................................................... 2.4.1 Correlations of herring population parameters ............................................................................... 2.4.2 Correlations between pre-recruiting clupeids and diet of common tern chicks.............................. 2.4.3 Relationships between recruiting clupeids and the reproduction of terns....................................... 2.4.3.1 Minsener Oldeog ............................................................................................................. 2.4.3.2 Banter See, Wilhelmshaven ............................................................................................ 2.4.4 Conclusions .................................................................................................................................... Norwegian spring-spawning herring and north Norwegian seabirds ............................................................ 2.5.1 Røst ......................................................................................................................................... 2.5.2 Hornøya ......................................................................................................................................... Conclusions ......................................................................................................................................... References ......................................................................................................................................... 6 7 7 8 8 8 8 9 10 10 11 12 13 13 14 15 16 Variation in prey taken by seabirds M. L. Tasker, C. J. Camphuysen, and P.Fossum .................................................................................................... 18 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 Introduction ......................................................................................................................................... Database description.................................................................................................................................... Variation in species and size of seabird prey............................................................................................... 3.3.1 General considerations ..................................................................................................................... 3.3.1.1 Most frequently recorded food items .............................................................................. 3.3.1.2 Prey size .......................................................................................................................... 3.3.2 Annual variation............................................................................................................................... 3.3.3 Seasonal variation ............................................................................................................................ 3.3.4 Spatial variation ............................................................................................................................... Evidence for selection related to prey body condition ................................................................................ 3.4.1 Differential prey selection between species ..................................................................................... 3.4.2 Differential selection of prey within species .................................................................................... Differences between adult and chick diet.................................................................................................... Discussion ......................................................................................................................................... ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 i 18 18 18 18 19 19 19 21 21 23 24 24 24 25 Section 3.7 4 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 5.2 5.3 Introduction ......................................................................................................................................... 4.1.1 The shrimp fishery off Niedersachsen, Germany............................................................................. Consumption of discards by seabirds .......................................................................................................... 4.2.1 Offshore fisheries in the North Sea .................................................................................................. Diets of seabirds that scavenge discards in the North Sea........................................................................... Numbers of seabirds supported by discards in the North Sea ..................................................................... Direct effects of discard consumption on species composition of seabirds in the North Sea...................... 4.5.1 Increase in population size of seabird species.................................................................................. 4.5.2 Population increase and changes in composition of seabird communities....................................... Indirect effects of discard consumption on species composition of seabirds in the North Sea ................... References ......................................................................................................................................... 29 29 31 31 33 33 33 33 36 38 38 Short term effects ........................................................................................................................................ 5.1.1 Introduction...................................................................................................................................... 5.1.2 Loss of feeding opportunities........................................................................................................... 5.1.3 Change in bird distribution............................................................................................................... 5.1.4 Competition at trawlers .................................................................................................................... 5.1.5 Changing diets.................................................................................................................................. 5.16 Reproduction.................................................................................................................................... Medium term effects ................................................................................................................................... 5.2.1 Introduction...................................................................................................................................... 5.2.2 Population size of consumper species .............................................................................................. 5.2.3 Population size and species composition ......................................................................................... References ......................................................................................................................................... 42 42 42 42 42 43 43 43 43 43 44 45 Evidence for decadal scale variations in seabird population ecology and links with the North Atlantic oscillation J. B. Reid, P. H. Becker, and R. W. Furness ........................................................................................................... 47 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 7 ......................................................................................................................................... 25 Exploration of the short-and medium-term consequences of a reduction in the amounts of fish discarded M. L. Tasker, P. H. Becker, and G. Chapdelaine.................................................................................................... 42 5.1 6 References Evaluation of the role of discards in supporting bird populations and their effects on the species composition of seabirds in the North Sea S. Garthe, U. Walter, M. L. Tasker, P. H. Becker, G. Chapdelaine, and R. W. Furness ........................................ 29 4.1 5 Page Introduction ......................................................................................................................................... Materials and methods................................................................................................................................. Results ......................................................................................................................................... Discussion ......................................................................................................................................... References ......................................................................................................................................... 47 47 47 49 49 A review of the causes, and consequences at the population level, of mass mortalities of seabirds ....................... 51 C. J. Camphuysen, P. J. Wright, M. Leopold, O. Hüppop, and J. B. Reid .............................................................. 51 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 Introduction ......................................................................................................................................... Presumed causes ......................................................................................................................................... Frequency and seasonal occurrence of wrecks ............................................................................................ Vulnerability of seabird species to wrecks .................................................................................................. Consequences to populations ...................................................................................................................... References ......................................................................................................................................... 51 51 52 53 55 56 Appendix 7.1 – List of Wrecks ....................................................................................................................................... 64 ii ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 The following nationally appointed members of the Seabird Ecology Working Group participated in the meetings from which this report is derived: R.T. Barrett Norway P.H. Becker Germany C.J. Camphuysen The Netherlands G. Chapdelaine Canada P. Fossum Norway R.W. Furness (Chair) UK S. Garthe Germany S.P.R. Greenstreet UK G.L. Hunt Jr USA O. Hüppop Germany M.F. Leopold The Netherlands W.A. Montevecchi Canada J.B. Reid UK M.L. Tasker UK P.J. Wright UK ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 1 1 A review of issues related to seabird consumption of fish and shellfish stocks, discards and mariculture as well as the trophic role and ecology of seabirds and waders G. L. Hunt1, W. A. Montevecchi2, and M. F. Leopold3 1 Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697, USA. Biopsychology Programme, Memorial University, St John’s, Newfoundland, Canada A1C 5S7. 3 IBN–DLO, PO Box 167, 1790 Den Burg, Texel, The Netherlands. 2 1.1 Introduction The Working Group on Seabird Ecology was requested by the Biological Oceanography Committee to assess the issues most likely to be raised within the ICES community concerning the foraging ecology of seabirds and waders, and the potential interactions between these groups of birds and fisheries. In responding to this request, the Working Group has listed a number of issues likely to be of importance. The Working Group recognized that each of these issues by itself is potentially the subject for new research and/or for a major review. The Working Group restricted itself to the identification of issues, and has used this list as the basis for developing possible future reports by the Working Group on Seabird Ecology, singularly, or in co-operation with other ICES Working Groups or Committees. fishery can be harmed by competition or other trophic interactions. As these questions and issues are addressed, both experimental approaches within the North Sea and comparisons with fisheries experience elsewhere in the world will be required. 1.2 1.2.1 Seabirds as indicators of prey stocks 1. In the present listing of issues, we have grouped issues into several large subcategories, but we have not ranked either the issues or the subcategories by importance, since that is probably not feasible except on a local or species-specific basis. In the first subcategory we list issues related to the use of seabirds and waders as indicators of conditions within the ecosystems of which they are a part. These issues include the distribution and abundance of prey organisms, the presence of pollutants and the need to calibrate the signals received from the birds with the absolute values of the parameters of interest. There are also important issues that focus on the basic ecology of seabirds that are of interest (Hunt et al., 1996), particularly insofar as they illuminate processes that control the structure and energy flow within marine ecosystems. In the second subcategory, we focus on the use of seabirds as model systems for investigating processes in marine ecosystems that are of broad interest, and for which seabirds may be useful windows into processes that are otherwise difficult to study. In the remaining subcategories, we list issues concerning the effects of seabirds and waders on fisheries, and conversely, the effects of fisheries on seabirds and waders. It should be noted that, in the cases where birds and the fishing industry utilise the same resource, there is the possibility that either, or both, the birds and the 2 Seabirds as indicators Changes in the distribution, abundance, species composition and breeding biology of seabirds can indicate changes in the distribution, abundance, and size classes of their preferred prey (reviewed by Montevecchi, 1993). a) Seabirds may be sensitive indicators of interannual and seasonal variation in the timing of life history events in prey stocks. b) Seabird diets may provide indications of changes in the biodiversity of prey populations not otherwise monitored by fisheries managers (Springer et al., 1984; Montevecchi, 1993). c) There is a need to calibrate the relationship between the responses of seabirds and the variations in abundance or recruitment in prey stocks of concern. 1.2.2 Seabirds as monitors of pollutants 2. Seabirds accumulate a wide variety of organic chemicals and heavy metals and provide an indication of the prevalence of these pollutants in the marine ecosystem. a) As wide ranging top predators, seabirds provide sampling opportunities that integrate pollutant transfers up food chains which is especially useful in the monitoring of lipophilic pollutants. They provide a better indication of possible hazards to humans than does sampling from low trophic levels. Because their biology is generally well known, the interpretation of pollutant burdens is easier. By integrating over ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 column, since many species of seabirds are restricted to forage in the top 2 m? time and spatial scales they permit more cost effective sampling. (see reviews in Furness and Greenwood, 1993). b) 1.3 1. How does the abundance of fish predators relative to the abundance of their prey influence the availability of food to seabird populations? b) 5. Evaluate evidence for decadal-scale variation in the population sizes, reproductive ecology or food habits of seabirds in the North Atlantic. Can these changes be related to the North Atlantic oscillation and other long-term cycles? There is a need to evaluate the evidence that the removal of large piscivorous fish by the fishery has enhanced prey availability to seabirds and thereby caused a related increase in seabird populations. 1.4 1. Seabird and wader interactions with mariculture Shellfish a) Blue mussel Mytilus edulis consumption by waders, especially oystercatchers Haematopus ostralegus, gulls, and seaducks, especially eiders Somateria mollissima and scoters, on both natural and artificial mussel beds in competition with mussel fisheries (e.g., Wadden Sea, coastal U.K., Baltic). b) Cockle Cerastaderma edule consumption by oystercatchers and eiders that compete with cockle fisheries (e.g., Wadden Sea, Camphuysen et al., 1996). c) Spisula consumption by scoters Melanitta spp. and eiders (e.g., German and Southern Bight). d) What are the population-level and local consequences for seabirds, seaducks and waders of the availability of commercial stocks of shellfish, and what changes in these avian populations would be predicted should the commercial stocks of shellfish no longer be available to these birds? This topic was briefly reviewed in the previous meetings of the Working Group (Leopold et al., 1996). There is a need to evaluate the evidence that changes in the species composition of predominant fish consumers of zooplankton has affected seabird populations. Are preferred foraging areas, with seabird aggregations, characteristic of some species or regions, but not of others? Given that certain forage fish species show strong relationships to bottom type and other species may respond to physical processes that concentrate planktonic prey, what is the importance of bottom sediment type versus hydrographic processes and structures in determining foraging location, foraging success and the role of seabirds in trophic transfer? a) 4. 7. At the population level, is most seabird foraging concentrated in a few critical areas where birds are present in high concentrations, or is most seabird foraging accomplished by widely dispersed individuals (e.g., Wright et al., 1996)? a) 3. What are the consequences for seabirds (and other marine predators) of prey switching as a consequence of changes in the availability of preferred prey? How are adult survival and reproductive performance affected? Processes affecting the trophic ecology of seabirds a) 2. 6. The pathways of pollutant to seabirds may be traced by using stable isotope analyses and fatty acid tracers to identify the trophic pathways and carbon source areas supporting seabird populations. Can we determine or predict where the highest concentrations of foraging seabirds are likely to be found, and the temporal stability of these preferred foraging locations? What are the winter foods of seabirds at sea? Are there seasonal changes in the species or types of prey taken, and if so, are these changes more marked for planktivorous than for piscivorous seabirds? What influences the vertical distribution of forage fish, in particular their abundance in the upper water ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 2. Finfish mariculture a) Salmon consumption by cormorants Phalacrocorax carbo, gulls, grey herons Ardea cinerea, ospreys Pandion haliaetus and other birds taking fish from penned stock. b) What are the local population-level consequences to birds of the availability of farm-raised fish, and the protection of mariculture by shooting birds that take or damage product? 3 1.5 Seabird impacts on recruitment of fish stocks 1.6 Mortality of seabirds Seabirds predominantly consume small fish, particularly 0-group fish. We believe that in almost all situations the local impact of this predation is likely to be less than that from predatory fish, and mostly trivial in terms of fish stock dynamics, but in some situations it has been suggested that recruitment to fish stocks might be affected by seabird predation rates. The key question is: What are the relative impacts, at the population level, of various anthropogenic and natural sources of seabird mortality at sea? In particular in our context: What is the relative impact of fisheries-related mortality compared to other sources of mortality? We appreciate that these topics are to some extent included in the remit of the Working Group on Ecosystem Effects of Fisheries. a) 1. Consumption of pre-recruit gadids by cormorants and shags Phalacrocorax aristotelis (Norway, Barrett et al., 1990). b) Consumption of juvenile herring Clupea harengus by puffins Fratercula arctica and other seabirds (Norway, Anker-Nilssen, 1992). c) Consumption of 0-group flatfishes by cormorants and other seabirds (Damme, 1995). d) Consumption of salmon smolt by gulls, cormorants and other seabirds (West coast and Alaska, USA). Although not within the ICES geographical area, the situation in western North America provides a useful example of predator build-up at an artificial feeding opportunity. Similar problems for released smolts may arise in Canada, the west of Scotland and in Norway (Greenstreet et al., 1993). Examination of food samples from gannets Morus bassanus, which consume low levels of salmon, has yielded important information about the salmon migration routes in eastern Canada (Montevecchi et al., 1988). Wrecks. a) 2. Mariculture a) e) f) Consumption of forage fish by seabirds and the potential for competition with fisheries for these stocks, particularly when local stocks near seabird colonies are depleted (e.g., sandeels Ammodytes marinus near Shetland; Sprat Sprattus sprattus near Firth of Forth, juvenile herring in German and Southern Bight). How does the rate and total take of the commercial harvest of forage fish stocks impact their availability to seabirds? This question is most likely to be an issue in ICES IVa west and possibly in ICES IVb (Tasker and Furness, 1996; Wright and Tasker, 1996; Wright et al., 1996). g) Are the perceived problems for seabirds indicative of similar problems for other marine predators? h) consumption of freshwater fish stocks by cormorants and sawbill ducks (Russell et al., 1996). 4 3. 4. 1.7 Drowning of cormorants, shags and other birds in fish pens. Net fishing a) Entanglement of seabirds in set nets, drift nets and fish traps. b) Are there specific areas of the oceans where seabirds are present in high densities, and thus particularly vulnerable to entanglement? Long line fishing a) 5. Wrecks or mass mortalities of seabirds may occur for a variety of reasons, one of which can be acute local food shortage. This issue is considered in greater depth later in this report (Section 7). Hooking and subsequent death of seabirds, in particular fulmars Fulmarus glacialis, great skuas Catharacta skua and gulls in long-line fisheries in the ICES areas and albatrosses and large petrels in southern oceans. Other sources of mortality (e.g., oil, chemical pollution, weather, etc.). Such effects often act in synergy. Are these influences greater or less than effects attributable to fisheries activities, and are synergies evident? Discards and offal Much of the following is addressed in greater detail later in this report in Sections 4 and 5 on Discards. 1. To what extent are present populations of seabirds dependent on discards and offal? 2. What impacts on seabird and other predator populations would be expected if food from discards and/or offal become reduced or unavailable? What secondary and tertiary impacts ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 might be anticipated (e.g., gull predation of other seabirds in Newfoundland; skua predation on kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla in Shetland; increased predation on fish populations of value). 3. 4. Do discards and offal ecological/trophic roles? play different Given that different fisheries produce different proportions of discards and different ranges of fish sizes in the discards, to what extent do seabirds show preferences between fisheries, and how does the rate of dumping of discards after a trawl affect their fate? Are seabirds feeding on discards that might otherwise survive? 5. Is there a seasonal variation in the importance of discards to seabirds? 6. Effects of fishing moratoria/ closed areas/ discard bans require to be evaluated as these present valuable experiments permitting responses of seabirds to be studied. 1.8 References Anker-Nilssen, T. 1992. Food supply as a determinant of reproduction and population development in Norwegian puffins Fratercula arctica. Doctor of Science thesis in terrestrial ecology, University of Trondheim. 46 pp. Barrett, R. T., Rov, N., Loen, J., and Montevecchi, W. A. 1990. Diets of shags Phalacrocorax aristotelis and cormorants P. carbo in Norway and implications for gadid stock recruitment. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 66: 205–218. Camphuysen, C. J., Ens, B. J., Heg, D., Hulscher, J., Van der Meer, J., and Smit, C. J. 1996. Oystercatcher winter mortality in The Netherlands: the effect of severe weather and food supply. Ardea, 84a: 469– 492. Damme, C. J. G. van 1995. Predation on juvenile flatfish by cormorants Phalacrocorax carbo in the Dutch Wadden Sea. NIOZ Rapport 1995–10, Netherlands Instituut voor Onderzoek der Zee, Texel. 46 pp. Furness, R. W., and Greenwood, J. J. D. 1993. Birds as monitors of environmental change. Chapman and Hall, London. 368 pp. Greenstreet, S. P. R., Morgan, R. I. G., Barnett, S., and Redhead, P. 1993. Variation in the numbers of shags, Phalacrocorax aristotelis, and common seals, Phoca vitulina, near the mouth of an Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar, river at the time of the smolt run. Journal of Animal Ecology, 62: 565–576. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Hunt, G. L., Barrett, R. T., Joiris, C., and Montevecchi, W. A. 1996. Seabird/fish interactions: an introduction. In: Seabird/fish interactions with particular reference to seabirds in the North Sea, pp. 2–5. Ed. by G. L. Hunt and R. W. Furness. ICES Cooperative Research Report 216. Leopold, M. F., Nehls, G., and Skov, H. 1996. Consumption of shellfish by seaducks and oystercatchers. In: Seabird/fish interactions with particular reference to seabirds in the North Sea, pp. 55–63. Ed. by G. L. Hunt and R. W. Furness ICES Cooperative Research Report 216. Montevecchi, W. A. 1993. Birds as indicators of change in marine prey stocks. In: Birds as monitors of environmental change, pp. 217–266. Ed. by R. W. Furness and J. J. D. Greenwood. Chapman and Hall, London. Montevecchi, W. A., Cairns, D. K., and Birt, V. L. 1988. Migration of post-smolt Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) off northeastern Newfoundland, as inferred from tag recoveries in a seabird colony. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science, 45: 568– 571. Russell, I. C., Dare, P. J., Eaton, D. R., and Armstrong, J. D. 1996. Assessment of the problem of fish-eating birds in inland fisheries in England and Wales. Directorate of Fisheries Research, Lowestoft. 130 pp. Springer, A. M., Roseneau, D. G., Murphy, E. C., and Springer, M. I. 1984. Environmental controls of marine food webs: food habits of seabirds in the eastern Chukchi Sea. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 41: 1202–1215. Tasker, M. L., and Furness, R. W. 1996. Estimation of food consumption by seabirds in the North Sea. In: Seabird/fish interactions with particular reference to seabirds in the North Sea, pp. 6–42. Ed. by G.l. Hunt and R.W. Furness ICES Cooperative Research Report 216. Wright, P., Barrett, R. T., Greenstreet, S. P. R., Olsen, B., and Tasker, M. L. 1996. Effect of fisheries for small fish on seabirds in the Eastern Atlantic. In: Seabird/fish interactions with particular reference to seabirds in the North Sea, pp. 44–55. Ed. by G. L. Hunt and R. W. Furness. ICES Cooperative Research Report 216. Wright, P., and Tasker, M. L. 1996. Analysis of fish consumption by seabirds by age class of prey fish. In Seabird/fish interactions with particular reference to seabirds in the North Sea, pp. 42–44. Ed. by G. L. Hunt and R. W. Furness ICES Cooperative Research Report 216. 5 2 Consumption of pre-recruit fish by seabirds and the possible use of this as an indicator of fish stock recruitment S. P. R. Greenstreet1, P. H. Becker2, R. T.Barrett3, P. Fossum4 and M. F. Leopold5 1 F.R.S. Marine Laboratory, PO Box 101, Victoria Road, Aberdeen AB11 9DB, U.K. Institut für Vogelforschung, Vogelwarte Helgoland, An der Vogelwarte 21, D–26386 Wilhelmshaven, Germany. 3 Zoology Museum, University of Tromsø, Tromsø, Norway. 4 Institute Marine Research, PO Box 1870 Nordnes, N–5024 Bergen, Norway. 5 IBN–DLO, PO Box 167, 1790 Den Burg, Texel, The Netherlands. 2 2.1 Introduction – background to fish stock assessment In order to address the consumption of pre-recruit fish by seabirds it is necessary to define exactly what is meant by the terms “recruitment” and “pre-recruit”. These terms mean different things to different people. Many consider “recruits” to be those fish maturing in a particular year to become part of the spawning stock. Consequently relatively old fish of some considerable length, two year old cod Gadus morhua of 30 cm or more for example, could be considered as “pre-recruits” because they had yet to mature. This definition however, is not the one adopted by those carrying out assessments of, for example, the demersal fish stocks. They consider recruits to be those fish entering the population of a particular species at the youngest exploited age, i.e. fish of an age which occur in the catch or discard data. This varies between species. Thus the youngest haddock Melanogrammus aeglefinus and whiting Merlangius merlangus which occur in catches are 0-group fish in the latter part of the year, while cod and saithe Pollachius virens of this age are rarely encountered in the catch. Consequently, assessment working groups consider cod and saithe recruits to be 1-group fish turning up in the catches in the year following their birth. As a result of these between species differences, the VPA population assessments provide estimates of the numbers of 0-group whiting and haddock for quarters 3 and 4 in any given year, but not for the equivalent aged cod and saithe. The numbers of recruits (0-group whiting and haddock in year x and 1-group cod and saithe in year x+1, where year x refers to the year class) can be calculated back down a time series using straightforward VPA. However, at the time when each working group meets, an estimate of the numbers of fish in the current recruiting year class is required in order to attempt to extrapolate forward to predict future recruitment. Clearly catch data for these fish are unavailable. In order to estimate current, or future recruitment, fisheries survey data are used. The historic VPA recruitment estimates are regressed against recruitment indices for the various species derived from survey data and, using the relationship obtained, the most recent survey recruitment indices are used to estimated the current numbers of fish in the recruit age classes. For species such as cod and haddock, the relationship between recruitment indices derived from survey data 6 and the VPA recruit estimates are fairly close; the survey data provides a reasonably accurate estimate of current recruit numbers. However, for species such as whiting and saithe, this is not the case. For these species it would be particularly useful if alternative means of estimating the numbers of recruits were available. Even in the case of haddock and cod it is worth exploring whether seabird diet data might provide a useful independent estimate to compare with young fish surveys or fisheries-derived estimates. Assessments of the major roundfish species are carried out over a large geographic scale. The stock “units” were re-evaluated as recently as 1995, following which, ACFM concluded that, for assessment purposes, the stocks of whiting and cod in VIId (eastern Channel) should be combined with those in the North Sea. Conclusions for the IIIa (Skagerrak) stocks were less clear cut, but there were indications that the cod and haddock stocks were linked with those in the North Sea and that there were therefore grounds for combining these assessments. Most seabird diet data have been collected during the breeding season and generally reflects the diets of birds feeding in the immediate vicinity of particular colonies. It is questionable whether data collected on such a limited spatial scale could ever be used to provide indices of numbers of recruits in areas as large as the North Sea, Skagerrak and eastern Channel combined, but we address this issue with real data below. The backcast VPA estimates of the numbers of recruits in past years is highly dependent upon estimates of natural mortality (by definition, these age classes do not occur in the catch so fishing mortality is zero). Constant values of natural mortality have been assumed for each species in carrying out the VPA assessments. If, however, natural mortality has varied as a result of between year variation in the diet of seabirds, then the VPA estimates of the numbers of recruits in each year could be seriously in error. Furthermore, the predation loading inflicted by seabirds on young gadid species (e.g., Barrett, 1991) may be independent of the numbers of young gadids available to seabirds, and may instead be dictated by fluctuations in the abundance of pelagic species such as mackerel Scomber scombrus, herring Clupea harengus, sprats Sprattus sprattus and sandeels Ammodytes spp., which tend to be the preferred prey of most seabird species. Such a situation has been ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 demonstrated for common seals Phoca vitulina in the Moray Firth (Tollit et al., 1997). 2.2 Introduction - background to seabird feeding ecology Because most seabirds feed their chicks small fish, often the juvenile stages of large fish, studies of seabird diet can provide information on the local abundance of the youngest age classes (0- and 1-group) of fish in the immediate area around a seabird colony. As reproductive success of seabirds depends on the availability of adequate food resources, several parameters of their reproductive biology or diet and feeding can be used as indicators of the availability and distributions of prey species on which they feed (reviewed by Montevecchi, 1993). However, breeding seabirds only sample fish within a short distance of their colony. Foraging ranges vary among species, and according to food abundance, but tend to be tens of kilometres at most. Thus diet, provisioning rate, or some surrogate measure such as chick growth rate, of seabirds at a single colony cannot sample an entire fish stock. The extent to which local sampling may reflect the wider situation is uncertain, but will be considered below. Fish stocks are sampled on a daily basis by seabirds whose diet is likely to reflect relative abundance of fish, both by size (year class) and by species. Among the different species of seabirds available for research, the generalists will have diets that are most likely to reflect the overall, local fish community structure, while specialists’ diets will reflect yearly or within-season differences in stocks of a particular species or group of species. Examples of specialist feeders are the sandeeldependent seabirds of Shetland (Martin, 1989; Monaghan et al., 1989), the herring-dependent puffins Fratercula arctica in western Norway (Anker-Nilssen, 1992) and the terns in the south-eastern North Sea that prey mainly on sandeels and clupeids. Cormorants Phalacrocorax carbo and gannets Morus bassanus are good examples of fish-eating seabirds that may take a large variety of fish species. Diets of cormorants include both demersal and schooling, pelagic fish. Gannets sample from the pelagic fish in surface waters. As a consequence, the local and temporal variation in gannet or cormorant diet can reflect differences in relative prey abundance. It is important to note that there are major differences between species of seabirds and between populations of a single species in different regions. For example, the sandeel ‘crisis’ in Shetland in the 1980s caused different responses in different seabird species in Shetland. Arctic tern Sterna paradisaea and kittiwake Rissa tridactyla diet remained predominantly sandeel during the period of food shortage, but these birds failed to breed successfully. In contrast, gannets switched diet to other fish species and their breeding success was unaffected. Guillemots Uria aalge continued to feed almost exclusively on sandeels yet their breeding success was ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 also unaffected. Great skuas Catharacta skua switched diet away from sandeels and their breeding success was reduced, but not as much as that of kittiwakes. Breeding numbers of Arctic terns fell drastically as these birds mostly chose not to breed while sandeels were scarce, whereas great skuas continued to attempt to breed even though food was short. Great skuas incurred reductions in adult survival rate through having to work harder for food, whereas Arctic terns possibly did not because they mostly refrained from breeding. Thus each seabird species may respond in a species-specific way to a change in food abundance, and may depend on different prey species, or combinations of species, in different regions. We show below, that kittiwake populations in different parts of Norway show opposite responses to increased local abundance of herring - in one case kittiwake breeding success increases with herring abundance and in the other it decreases. Such local relationships are to be expected since responses depend both on the ecology of the seabird species but also on the combination of preferred prey fish species on which the birds depend. Total food availability will affect seabird condition in terms of average body mass, breeding output, growth and survival of young. Different parameters that can be measured in seabirds may thus provide information on total food abundance and the composition of the fish community on which the birds feed. In situations where young fish make up most of the diets, seabirds may provide an additional means to sample younger stages of fish at a high temporal resolution, and at low cost compared to traditional ways of monitoring fish. Using the additional indications provided by seabirds may add little to assessment costs. 2.3 Seabirds as samplers of 0-group fish: case studies on cormorants/shags Cormorants and shags Phalacrocorax aristotelis regurgitate indigestible prey remains in discrete pellets, probably on a daily basis (Harris and Wanless, 1993). These pellets are relatively easily collected and can be analysed for the presence of fish otoliths, or other identifiable remains, which can be related to fish size. As such, these pellets provide an easy means to sample the diet and to get information on the state of the fish community at high temporal and spatial resolution. Unfortunately, few long-term data sets exist for cormorant diets in relation to prey availability in any one locality. However, there is evidence that, for example, double-crested cormorant diet can change considerably over time, in response to changes in the prey fish community (Rail and Chapdelaine, 1998). Here we consider the potential of cormorants and shags to be used as a tool in assessing the relative abundance of 0-group gadids and flatfish, using case studies made in European waters. The first is a study on shags feeding 7 mainly on saithe in Norway, the second is on cormorants feeding mainly on flatfish in the Wadden Sea. 2.3.1 Shags and saithe, Norway 0-group saithe live in shallow, inshore waters that are notoriously difficult to sample. It is relevant to note that the relationship between VPA estimates of 1-group saithe and the numbers of young fish detected in surveys is very weak (ICES, 1997a). In such a situation, “systematic surveys of prey harvests of shags breeding on inshore islands as supplementary inputs to [models on fish abundance]” could be useful (Barrett, 1991). Pellets were sampled in the 1985 and 1986 breeding seasons on Bleiksøy, N. Norway (69°17’N, 15°53’N). Gadid otoliths, all believed to be saithe, made up 81% and 58% of all items identified in these two years and the birds mainly took 0- and 1-group fish. When comparing 1985 to 1986, in the second year the diet contained fewer saithe with a shift toward a higher proportion of older fish. This indicates that 1986 was a poor year for 0-group recruits in the area. This corroborated results of newly developed 0-group surveys which ran in 1985–92. It is worth noting here that the data from sampling shag diet provided indications of low saithe production two or three years sooner than could be determined from VPA data (ICES, 1997a). 2.3.2 Cormorants and flatfish, Dutch Wadden Sea Cormorant pellets from several major roosts (1993) and one colony (1992) were sampled in late summer at locations throughout the Dutch Wadden Sea. Flatfish were the most important prey, representing 73% of the total diet by numbers (Leopold et al., 1998). Total consumption of flatfish was estimated at 28.5 million fish, of which 44.6% were plaice Pleuronectes platessa, 30.9% dab Limanda limanda, 21.7% flounder Platichthys flesus and 2.8% sole Solea vulgaris. Flatfish abundance was estimated from a combination of a dedicated 0-group flatfish survey and the Demersal Young Fish Surveys. Cormorant predation was estimated to range from 30–50% of the total mortality of the 0group fish of these species. Both the figures for consumption and for fish abundance should be taken with considerable caution, as the first are as yet uncorrected for lost otoliths (by digestion) and fish abundance may have been underestimated. Despite these uncertainties, and also considering that absolute numbers of flatfish were low in the years of study, these figures still suggest that cormorant predation was significant and that these birds relied on juvenile flatfish to a large extent. This implies that the cormorants sample 0-group fish with great efficiency and that at least relative differences between species of fish should be represented in the birds’ diet. however. Cormorants have established several breeding colonies in the Dutch Wadden Sea in recent years, so there is now also potential for studies that relate diet to breeding parameters such as growth rate and survival of chicks in these parts. 2.4 Pre-recruit herring and common tern reproduction Pre-recruit fish have special importance as food for small seabirds such as terns. These birds have difficulty taking fish longer than 20 cm. Small fish species or juvenile fish therefore form the basis of their diet, consequently terns may be especially useful as indicators of pre-recruit fish abundance. Their overall energy reserves are low, so food availability immediately affects body condition and reproduction in adults (Frank and Becker, 1992; Wendeln, 1997) and growth of young (Becker and Specht, 1991; Mlody and Becker, 1991). They transport single food items in the bill, making it easy to obtain information on prey identity. Common terns Sterna hirundo and Arctic terns are distributed widely around the coasts of the North Sea, and the accessibility of many colony sites make them ideal as monitors of the temporal and spatial variations of 0-group fish. Thus the breeding failures among Arctic terns in Shetland during the 1980s (Furness, 1987; Monaghan et al., 1989, 1992; Uttley, 1992) coincided with a period of exceptionally low sandeel recruitment (Bailey et al., 1991). In the southern North Sea, however, sandeels are not important prey for terns. Instead, clupeids, especially herring, but also sprat, are the dominant prey of terns (Frank, 1992; Frick and Becker, 1995; Tasker and Furness, 1996; Becker, 1996a; Stienen and Brenninkmeijer, 1998). Thus in this section, we link common tern reproduction in the Wadden Sea with IBTS information collected by ICES on herring stock size. In a long-term project, two colonies in the German Wadden Sea, Minsener Oldeoog and Banter See, Wilhelmshaven, have been studied since 1981, to look for relationships between breeding performance parameters and fish availability. A preliminary analysis has already been presented by Becker (1996b). 2.4.1 Correlations of herring population parameters Herring larval abundance for the whole North Sea and for just the south-eastern North Sea are significantly and positively correlated, indicating that variation in the abundance of herring larvae over the North Sea as a whole parallels that in the south-eastern North Sea alone. Larval abundance and the IBTS herring index are also correlated (1-ring, Table 2.1, ICES, 1997b, c). The 1995 value, however, does not fit the regression line. The IBTS herring estimate of the 1995 year class appears to be an outlier (ICES, 1997b). Clearly, studies that only lasted 1–2 years cannot be used to describe long-term changes in fish stocks. Acquiring longer time series of diet analyses seem promising, 8 ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Table 2.1. Spearman correlation coefficients between various parameters estimating the clupeid stock in the North Sea (IBTS). n = 17 year classes (1979–1995). IBTS herring index North Sea IBTS sprat North Sea IBTS sprat index North Sea IBTS clupeids Herring larvae density –.07 IBTS clupeids .76 *** Herring larvae density .43 –.44 .14 Herring larvae abundance .77 *** –.04 .62 ** 2.4.2 Correlations between pre-recruiting clupeids and diet of common tern chicks Clupeids are the most important common tern food in the Wadden Sea. On Minsener Oldeoog and Baltrum, they represent 29–70% of the chick diet (mean=49%, 9 years; Frank, 1992, 1998; Frick and Becker, 1995; Ludwigs, 1998). In the colony Banter See in Wilhelmshaven, 3– 15% of the chicks' food (mean=10%, n=6; unpubl. data) and 11–48% of the courtship food are clupeids (mean=24%, n=7 years; Wendeln, 1997 and unpubl.). The common terns feed on 0-group herring, 1-group herring, and on 1-group sprat which are about 6–13 cm long during spring in the Wadden Sea. It is difficult to distinguish visually between herring and sprat in the bill of a tern. Herring was, however, the dominant species in the local waters: in stow net catches during 8 years (1985–1996) on Minsener Oldeoog, sprat dominated the clupeids (92%) in 1994 only, corresponding to a very high IBTS sprat index (year .52 * .59* class 1993, ICES 1997c). In the other years, herring dominated (92–99%; Behnke, 1996; Ludwigs, 1998) in the stow net catches, and in the samples of dropped clupeids recovered from the vicinity of nests. In the Wadden Sea colonies, the amount of clupeids in chick diet was positively correlated with the herring larvae density in the south eastern North Sea (c.f. Figure 2.1, Minsener Oldeoog, rs=0.70, p<0.05, n=9, Table 2.2; with IBTS herring index rs=0.45, n=9, n.s.; but not with IBTS sprat index rs=0.03, n=9, n.s.). In the Banter See colony, the amount of clupeids in chick diet was positively correlated with herring larvae abundance (rs=0.95, p<0.05, n=6, Table 2.3) and IBTS herring index (rs=0.89, p<0.05, n=6). A high clupeid proportion in tern diet apparently indicates a good stock of pre-recruiting clupeids, especially herring. There was no significant correlation between herring larvae density and amount of clupeids in tern diet in the same year. Figure 2.1. Data sampling of herring recruits and common tern reproduction. Key tern diet is herring spawned in autumn two calendar years (20 months) before the tern breeding season. These herring are sampled by the IBTS surveys during spring as larvae the year before the tern breeding season, and as 1-ringers in the same season as tern breeding. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 9 Table 2.2. Spearman correlation coefficients between clupeid stock data of the North Sea (IBTS) and seabird data (common tern, Minsener Oldeoog, 1981–1997) Herring larvae density South East (n=17) Herring larvae abundance North Sea (n=17) % clupeids in chick diet (n=9) .70 * .32 growth rate of chicks (n=14) .74 ** .58 * growth rate of fledged chicks (n=11) .77 ** .73 * % chick losses by food shortage (n=17) –.58 * –.49 * age of fledging (n=13) –.56 * –.46 chick fledged/pair .23 .17 no. breeding pairs –.32 –.47 Table 2.3. Spearman correlation coefficients between clupeid stock data of the North Sea (IBTS) and seabird data (common tern, common tern, Wilhelmshaven, 1991–1997). n = 7 except % clupeids in chick diet. IBTS herring index IBTS sprat index IBTS clupeids Herring larvae density Herring larvae abundance North Sea North Sea North Sea South East North Sea % clupeids in chick diet (n=6) .89* .43 .43 .66 .95**32 growth rate of chicks .21 .89** .75 .79* .61 growth rate of fledged chicks .36 .68 .49 .94* .77 * .75 .61 .50 .32 chick fledged/pair – 2.4.3 Relationships between recruiting clupeids and the reproduction of terns 2.4.3.1 Minsener Oldeoog Between 1981 and 1997, tern breeding success fluctuated greatly between 0 and 1.6 chicks per pair per year, owing to variation in the annual food availability as well as to the influence of predators (Becker, 1998). Comparison of herring larvae density and common tern chick losses through starvation, over a 17 year period (1981–1997), showed that common terns lost fewer 10 chicks and survivors grew better. (Chick growth rate being interpreted as a surrogate for food provisioning rate) in years with high rate of herring larvae density (Figure 2.2). There are significant correlations between herring larvae production two years before and common tern chick growth rate, fledging age and chick loss (Table 2.2, Figure 2.3). The linear modelling of chick growth rate vs herring larvae index for the south east North Sea was y=2.95x + 5.517. Consequently, an increase of the larvae index by 0.1 would increase the chick growth rate by 0.3 g/d, and reduce the chick losses. No significant correlations were found with sprat index. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Figure 2.2. Time trends of herring larval density (south-east North Sea, x1000; year class=year–2; IBTS) and losses of common tern chicks (in %x10) on Minsener Oldeoog, Wadden Sea, from 1981–1997; Becker, unpublished data. Figure 2.3. Correlation of herring larval density (south-east North Sea, x1000; year class=year–2; IBTS) with growth rate of common tern chicks that fledged on Minsener Oldeoog, Wadden Sea, from 1981–1997; Becker, unpublished data. 2.4.3.2 Banter See, Wilhelmshaven The number of fledglings per pair per year varied between 0.2 and 2.4 chicks (1991–1997; Becker, 1998). The correlations of reproductive parameters with herring stock density were similar to those at Minsener Oldeoog (Table 2.3, Figure 2.4). Chick loss through predation was not so important as on Minsener Oldeoog, and the ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 reproductive success increased positively with herring availability (but n.s., Table 2.3). Chick growth was especially good in 1994, the year with high sprat abundance (see also Minsener Oldeoog Figure 2.3). Thus sprat abundance can confuse the relationship with herring abundance, but in most years sprat abundance was too low to cause this problem. 11 Figure 2.4. Correlation of herring larval density (south-east North Sea, x1000; year class=year–2; IBTS) with growth rate of common tern chicks that fledged at Banter See, Wilhelmshaven, from 1991–1997; Becker, unpublished data. The regression of chick growth rate on the herring larvae index (Figure 2.4) was y=4.0x+6.845. Thus an increase in the herring index value of 0.1 would improve chick growth by 0.4g/d. Using the herring larvae density or abundance for the same year the terns bred, the correlations described above were not significant at either colony. However, to conclude that tern breeding ecology can be used as a measure of herring juvenile abundance, some important points have to be clarified: • Decisive for the terns was the herring year class two calendar years before the respective breeding season (i.e. 1-ring in the breeding season, Figure 2.1), or the sprat year class one year before the tern breeding (age 1 in the breeding season). This may indicate that the 1-group herring is more important for tern reproduction than 0-group. This should be investigated further. • The correlations of tern data with the herring larvae abundance estimates are much closer than those with IBTS herring index (1-ring). This suggests that the sampling of larvae gives a better annual figure of the herring population 1 year later than the sampling of 1-ringers in the current year. Fish catches of 1-ringers may be taken more by chance than larvae sampling. The dependence of the reproduction of terns on prerecruit clupeids should be verified at another colony site, for example on Griend in the Dutch Wadden Sea where terns are also studied (by Stienen and Brenninkmeijer). 2.4.4 Conclusions Although not related to herring larval production in the same year (these larvae being too small to provide much food for terns), the data show that the reproduction of terns on the southern North Sea coast is strongly linked to the annual stock of juvenile herring, their main food source. Consequently, terns can be used in addition to the fisheries' data to indicate abundance of the young herring stock. Conversely, fisheries' data on clupeids may be used to predict growth and reproductive success of terns. A reduced common tern breeding population in the Wadden Sea in 1996 and 1997 (Südbeck et al., 1998) also may be due to the reduced occurrence of juvenile clupeids. Despite the short foraging range of breeding common terns (max ca 7 km), the correlation with herring abundance over the entire south-eastern North Sea is quite strong. This suggests that herring are fairly uniformly distributed over this region, or at least that local abundance near these tern colonies is closely related to abundance at the wider scale. 12 • • To investigate interactions between seabird reproduction and fish stocks, breeding seabird numbers or overall breeding success are often considered, but parameters more directly linked to ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 food availability such as chick growth, rate of chick starvation or fledging success should be assessed as they may be expected to provide a more direct and sensitive indicator of food supply (Table 2.2). The data presented also underline the importance of long term data series as the key tool to understand interactions between seabirds and fish. 2.5 Norwegian spring-spawning herring and north Norwegian seabirds The Norwegian spring-spawning stock of the AtlantoScandian herring has shown huge fluctuations in size during the last half century. Between 1957–1971, it collapsed from ca. 18 million tonnes to an estimated 12000 tonnes, remained very low (<1 million tonnes) until 1985, and has since been increasing (ICES, 1997a). Norwegian seabirds feed their chicks mainly on small fish, samples of which are easy to obtain. Several studies have documented that several seabird species feed significant amounts of 0- and 1-group herring to their chicks and studies along the coast of Norway have shown that the amounts of herring in the samples vary considerably from year to year (Barrett et al., 1987; Barrett, 1996). This has been highlighted in two longterm studies on two colonies in North Norway, Hernyken at Røst (67o26'N, 11o52'E) and Hornøya in East Finnmark (70o22'N, 31o10'E). Close correlations exist between the amount of herring fed to chicks and independent assessments of amounts of young herring in the sea (Anker-Nilssen, 1992; Anker-Nilssen and Øyan, 1995; Barrett and Krasnov, 1996). 2.5.1 Røst There is clear evidence that seabirds breeding at Røst, Lofoten Islands breed successfully only when larval and 0-group stages of herring are abundant. In years with low abundance of herring, puffins and common guillemots have produced few chicks of poor quality, or no chicks at all, and kittiwakes have had reduced breeding success (Bakken, 1989; Anker-Nilssen, 1992; Anker-Nilssen and Øyan, 1995; Anker-Nilssen et al., 1997). There is, however, no clear causal relationship between breeding success and abundance of herring larvae. Between 1979–1994, herring content in puffin chick diet varied between 0% and 89% wet mass, with sandeels, saithe and haddock making up most of the remainder. There is no simple relationship between the amount of herring fed to the chicks and 0-group abundance. This is possibly due to a preference for other prey species such as sandeels or saithe which tended also to be abundant in years with high herring abundance (e.g., 1983, 1992, 1994). Figure 2.5. The relationship between the abundance indices of age-0 herring in the Barents Sea and adjacent waters in early autumn and the fledging success of puffins at Røst, northern Norway, in 1975–1996. Eight points are located close to the origin. From AnkerNilssen et al. (1997). ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 13 Although Anker-Nilssen et al. (1997) demonstrated a strong positive relationship between breeding success and independently obtained indices of 0-group herring abundance over a 22 year period (1975–1996, Figure 2.5, rs=0.898, p<0.001), there was a clear threshold above which fledging success was at a maximum and could not increase with increases in herring abundance. This suggests that any changes above e.g., 1.0 in the presently-used logarithmic index of herring 0-group abundance (ICES 1997a) will not be detectable in puffin breeding success alone. A similar positive relationship between kittiwake breeding success and 0group herring abundance at Røst was also found between 1980–1996 (Figure 2.6, rs=0.815, p<0.001, AnkerNilssen et al., 1997), but again there is a threshold above which breeding success does not increase further. Because the species composition of the diet does not relate directly to the availability of herring, and due to the shape of the relationship curves between availability of 0-group herring and breeding success, it is impossible to predict levels of herring 0-group fish at scales finer than high (log. index >1.0) or low (< 0.3) from breeding success data. Figure 2.6. The relationship between the abundance indices of age-0 herring in the Barents Sea and adjacent waters in early autumn and the breeding success of kittiwakes at Røst, northern Norway, in 1980–1996. From Anker-Nilssen et al. 1997. Puffin diet data from several northwestern Norwegian colonies have, however, indicated the presence of some 0-group herring in the Barents Sea in years when surveys failed to document any (1981, 1982, 1986, 1987, index=0, Barrett et al., 1987; Barrett, 1996; ICES, 1997a). 2.5.2 Hornøya Whereas seabirds breeding at Røst depend heavily on herring to feed their chicks, the main diet of seabird chicks in the southern Barents Sea consists of varying proportions of herring, sandeels and capelin Mallotus villosus (Barrett and Krasnov, 1996). Sandeels and capelin are caught mainly as adult fish (Barrett and Furness, 1990; Barrett and Krasnov, 1996). It has proved impossible to relate amounts of capelin caught by puffins, kittiwakes or common guillemots with independent measures of capelin abundance, probably due to the differences in spatial scale at which the parameters were measured (Barrett and Krasnov, 1996). There was, however, a suggestion that the kittiwakes found smaller capelin (mean 114±40 mm) in 1989 than in all but one of the other years (130–140 mm, 1980– 1994), due to low recruitment of capelin after the collapse of the stock in 1987. 14 The herring, however, are consumed by seabirds as 1group fish, and while there were no relationships between the previous years’ 0-group herring abundance indices and the amount of herring in the chick diet on the Kola Peninsula, there were clear positive correlations for kittiwakes, common guillemots and puffins further west on Hornøya (Figure 2.7). There are also positive correlations between herring content in the diet of common guillemot and puffin chicks and independent assessments (ICES, 1997a) of 1-group herring in the Barents Sea (r2=44%, df=9, p=0.027 and r2=76%, df=8, p<0.0001 respectively; Barrett, unpubl.). The correlation for kittiwakes was not significant (r2=32%, df=10, p=0.07). Food data collected nearly every year since 1980 showed that herring first appeared in food samples in 1985, was absent in the late 1980s and appeared again in 1990. In 1993 and 1994 herring constituted >90% of kittiwake diet samples and 30–50% of the puffin and common guillemot diet samples. The appearance in 1985 corresponds with the only large cohorts of 0-group herring spawned in the 1980s (1983, 1984), whereas the presence in all diets in the early 1990s corresponds with several years of successful spawning (1989–1994, ICES 1997a). ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Figure 2.7. The relationship between the percent of herring in common guillemot, kittiwake and puffin chick diets on Hornøya, north Norway (solid squares) and Kharlov, northwest Russia (open circles), and the log index of 0-group herring abundance in the previous year. Each graph has several points at the origin, not plotted. From Barrett and Krasnov (1996). Contrary to the situation at Røst, it seems that increased amounts of herring in chick diet corresponds to a decline in the breeding success of kittiwakes at Hornøya (r2=0.821, p>0.01, n=10, Anker-Nilssen et al., 1997). There were, however, no significant relationships between kittiwake breeding success and indices for the 1-group or the previous years’ 0-group herring abundance. At present, the only parameters for seabirds on Hornøya which corroborate the fisheries’ assessments of the 0- and 1-group cohorts of herring in the Barents Sea are the amounts of herring in the diets of chicks of kittiwake, common guillemot and puffin. 2.6 Conclusions We conclude that there are some case studies of seabirds that show fairly strong correlations between diet composition or food provisioning (or a surrogate ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 measure of this such as chick growth rate) and the abundance of pre-recruit fish. Fisheries-derived and survey-derived estimates of recruitment apply to entire stocks or to very large geographical areas, so are on a much larger spatial scale than the distribution of fish providing food to seabird chicks at a particular colony. Nevertheless, correlations between common tern breeding parameters and herring abundance in the southeastern North Sea provide an example of a correlation where it seems that the local performance of terns does reflect the changes in herring abundance over a larger scale. This may not always be the case. Thus it would be essential to be very cautious if using seabird data to infer the level of recruitment into a fish prey population over a wide area. In addition to the relationships discussed here, good examples can be found in the literature, as for example Montevecchi and Myers (1995), Montevecchi (1993). 15 2.7 References Anker-Nilssen, T. 1992. Food supply as a determinant of reproduction and population development in Norwegian puffins Fratercula arctica. Doctor of Science thesis in terrestrial ecology, University of Trondheim. 46 pp. Anker-Nilssen, T., Barrett, R. T., and Krasnov, J. 1997. Long- and short-term responses of seabirds in the Norwegian and Barents Seas to changes in stocks of prey fish. Proceedings of a symposium on forage fishes in marine ecosystems. Alaska Sea Grant College Program AK–SG–97–01: 683–698. Becker, P. H. 1996a. Flußseeschwalben (Sterna hirundo) in Wilhelmshaven. Oldenburger Jahrbuch, 96: 263– 296. Becker, P. H. 1996b. Relationships between fish populations and reproductive biology of common terns in the Wadden Sea. In: Seabird/fish interactions, with particular reference to seabirds in the North Sea, pp. 65–67. Ed. by G.L. Hunt and R.W. Furness. ICES Cooperative Research Report 216. Becker, P. H. 1998. Langzeittrends des Bruterfolgs der Flußseeschwalbe und seiner Einflußgrößen im Wattenmeer. Vogelwelt, 119: 223–234. Anker-Nilssen, T., and Øyan, H. S. 1995. Hekkebiologiske langtidsstudier av lunder på Røst. NINA Fagrapport, 15. 48 pp. Becker, P. H., and Specht, R. 1991. Body mass fluctuations and mortality in common tern Sterna hirundo chicks dependent on weather and tide in the Wadden Sea. Ardea, 79: 45–56. Bailey, R. S., Furness, R. W., Gauld, J. A., and Kunzlik, P. A. 1991. Recent changes in the population of the sandeel (Ammodytes marinus Raitt) at Shetland in relation to estimates of seabird predation. ICES Marine Science Symposium, 193: 209–216. Behnke, A. 1996. Vergleich verschiedener Fang- und Analysemethoden zur Fluktuation von KleinfischBeständen im Wattenmeer. Diplomarbeit University of Oldenburg. 104 pp. Bakken, V. 1989. The population development of common guillemot Uria aalge on Vedøy, Røst. Fauna norvegica Series C, Cinclus, 12: 41–46. Frank, D. 1992. The influence of feeding conditions on food provisioning of chicks in common terns Sterna hirundo nesting in the German Wadden Sea. Ardea, 80: 45–55. Barrett, R. T. 1991. Shags (Phalacrocorax aristotelis L.) as potential samplers of juvenile saithe (Pollachius virens L.) stocks in northern Norway. Sarsia, 76: 153–156. Barrett, R. T. 1996. Prey harvest, chick growth, and production of three seabird species on Bleiksøy, North Norway, during years of variable food availability. In: Studies of high-latitude seabirds. 4. Trophic relationships and energetics of endotherms in cold ocean systems, pp. 20–26. Ed. by W. A. Montevecchi. Canadian Wildlife Service Occasional Paper 91. Barrett, R. T., Anker-Nilssen, T., Rikardsen, F., Valde, K., Røv, N., and Wader, V. 1987. The food, growth and fledging success of Norwegian puffin chicks Fratercula arctica in 1980–1983. Ornis Scandinavica, 18: 73–83. Barrett, R. T., and Furness, R. W. 1990. The prey and diving depths of seabirds on Hornøy, North Norway after a decrease in the Barents Sea capelin stocks. Ornis Scandinavica, 21: 179–186. Barrett, R. T., and Krasnov, J. V. 1996. Recent responses to changes in stocks of prey species by seabirds breeding in the southern Barents Sea. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 53: 713–722. 16 Frank, D. 1998. Bruterfolgsmonitoring an der Flußseeschwalbe als Instrument ökologischer Begleituntersuchungen zu einer Pipeline-Verlegung. Vogelwelt 119: 235–241. Frank, D., and Becker, P. H. 1992. Body mass and nest reliefs in common terns Sterna hirundo exposed to different feeding conditions. Ardea, 80: 57–69. Frick, S., and Becker, P. H. 1995. Unterschiedliche Ernährungsstrategien von Flußund Küstenseeschwalbe (Sterna hirundo und S. paradisaea) im Wattenmeer. Journal für Ornithologie, 136: 47–63. Furness, R. W. 1987. The impact of fisheries on seabird populations in the North Sea. In: The status of the North Sea environment; reasons for concern, Vol. 2, pp. 179–192. Ed. by G. Peet. Werkgroep Noordzee, Amsterdam. Harris, M. P., and Wanless, S. 1993. The diet of shags (Phalacrocorax aristotelis) during the chick-rearing period assessed by three methods. Bird Study, 40: 135–139. ICES 1997a. Report of the northern pelagic and blue whiting fisheries working group. ICES CM 1997/Assess:14. 188 pp. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 ICES 1997b. Report of the herring assessment working group for the area south of 62 N. ICES CM 1997/ASSESS:8. 392 pp. ICES 1997c. Report of the International Bottom Trawl Survey in the North Sea, Skagerak and Kattegat in 1996: Quarter 1. ICES CM 1997/H:8. 52 pp. Leopold, M. F., van Damme, C .J. G., and van der Veer, H. W. 1998 Impact of cormorant predation on juvenile flatfish in the Dutch Wadden Sea. Netherlands Journal of Sea Research, 40: 93–108. Ludwigs, J. D. 1998. Kleptoparasitismus bei der Flußseeschwalbe (Sterna hirundo) als Anzeiger für Nahrungsmangel. Vogelwelt, 119: 193–203. Martin, A. R. 1989. The diet of Atlantic puffin (Fratercula arctica) and northern gannet (Sula bassana) chicks at Shetland colony during a period of changing prey availability. Bird Study, 36:170–180. Mlody, B., and Becker, P. H. 1991. KörpermasseEntwicklung und Mortalität von Küken der Flussseeschwalbe (Sterna hirundo L.) unter ungünstigen Umweltbedingungen. Vogelwarte, 36: 110–131. Monaghan, P., Uttley, J. D., and Burns, M. D. 1992. Effect of changes in food availability on reproductive effort in Arctic terns Sterna paradisaea. Ardea, 80: 71–81. Monaghan, P., Uttley, J. D., Burns, M. D., Thaine, C. and Blackwood, J. 1989. The relationship between food supply, reproductive effort and breeding success in Arctic terns Sterna paradisaea. Journal of Animal Ecology, 58: 261–274. Montevecchi, W. A., and Myers, R. A. 1995. Prey harvests of seabirds reflect pelagic fish and squid abundance on multiple spatial and temporal scales. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 117: 1–9. Rail, J. F., and Chapdelaine G. 1998. Foods of doublecrested cormorants Phalacrocorax auritus in the gulf and estuary of the St Lawrence River, Québec Canada. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 76: 635–643. Stienen, E. W. M., and Brenninkmeijer, A. 1998. Population trends in common terns Sterna hirundo along the Dutch coast. Vogelwelt, 119: 165–168. Südbeck, P., Hälterlein, B., Knief, W., and Köppen, K. 1998. Bestandsentwicklung von Fluß- und Küstenseeschwalbe an den deutschen Küsten. Vogelwelt, 119: 147–163. Tasker, M., and Furness, R. W. 1996. Estimation of food consumption by seabirds in the North Sea. In: Seabird/fish interactions, with particular reference to seabirds in the North Sea, pp. 6–42. Ed. by G.L. Hunt and R.W. Furness. ICES Coop. Res. Report 216. Tollitt, D. J., Greenstreet, S. P. R., and Thompson, P. M. 1997. Prey selection by harbour seals Phoca vitulina in relation to variations in prey abundance. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 75: 1508–1518. Uttley, J. D., 1992. Food supply and allocation of parental effort in Arctic terns Sterna paradisaea. Ardea, 80: 83–91. Wendeln, H. 1997. Body mass of female common terns (Sterna hirundo) during courtship: relationships to male quality, egg mass, diet, laying date and age. Colonial Waterbirds, 20: 235–243. Montevecchi, W. A. 1993. Birds as indicators of change in marine prey stocks. In: Birds as Monitors of Environmental Change, pp. 217–266. Ed. by R.W. Furness and J.J.D. Greenwood. Chapman and Hall, London. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 17 3 Variation in prey taken by seabirds M. L. Tasker1, C. J. Camphuysen2, and P. Fossum3 1 Joint Nature Conservation Committee, 7 Thistle Place, Aberdeen AB10 1UZ, U.K. Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, PO Box 59, 1790 AB Den Burg, Texel, The Netherlands. 3 Institute Marine Research, PO Box 1870 Nordnes, N–5024 Bergen, Norway. 2 3.1 Introduction Seabird diet in the ICES area has been described by studies that have used a variety of techniques; principally these are: analysis of regurgitated samples from living birds or from the contents of regurgitated pellets, observations of prey being carried to chicks and analysis of stomach contents of dead birds killed either deliberately or accidentally, for instance in an oil spill or as by-catch (Duffy and Jackson, 1986). Each technique used has some bias attached; these biases may be large and unquantifiable. Analyses of regurgitated samples or of otolith pellets are likely to miss small prey items with few or no hard parts. Observations of prey brought to colonies may not represent adult diet, and may also be biased by the difficulty of identifying prey from a distance. Killing live birds may be the least biased method, but there may in turn be problems in ensuring that a representative sample of birds is taken. There may also be substantial cultural difficulties in killing birds (e.g., Coleridge, 1854). Analysis of the stomach contents of oil spill victims may be biased by behavioural changes of birds prior to death. It may therefore often be difficult to distinguish real patterns in seabird diet from patterns caused by the study method. There have been many studies of seabird diet; rather than review these exhaustively for evidence of dietary variation at various spatial and temporal scales, these studies have been gathered into a database which is described below. Examples to describe the various aspects of variation have then been drawn from this database to form this section of the report. We also draw attention to Tasker and Furness (1996) who reviewed dietary variation of seabirds in the North Sea. 3.2 Database description A relational database was established by members of the working group to facilitate this and future reviews of the diet of seabirds. For all seabirds within the ICES and NAFO areas, dietary information was collected from published (including ‘grey literature’) and unpublished sources, and coded in a standard format. The first version of this database was launched (SEABDIET 1.0) at this meeting. Each reference is coded with the ICES or NAFO area in which the samples were collected, such that most frequent prey items can be searched from the database using area codes. It contains 838 study reports (diet studies of a given predator at a given time and 18 place) covering 38 species of birds and 518 different prey types. For the present review, a list of 1680 references dealing with seabird diets was consulted. These references are not included in the present document, but are available in digitised format for future consultation. We are aware that the database is still incomplete and it will be enlarged in the future. 3.3 Variation in species and size of seabird prey 3.3.1 General considerations Several general points should be noted in relation to this review. First, prey abundance may be very different from prey availability. While ‘prey populations’ may remain constant over time or may be equally abundant in neighbouring areas, spatial differences or temporal changes in prey availability can influence whether or not such prey is taken. Secondly, there has been a tendency to study those organisms that appear in seabird diets, rather than the full range of potential prey items. There is rarely any insight as to why a potential prey item is not taken. Food aversions, other than the complete unsuitability of prey (too large, out of reach), are normally ignored. A third point is that modern technology has challenged a number of common assumptions on foraging performance. Seabirds tagged with satellite and/or radio transmitters or other data loggers can be followed and detailed activity and prey consumption on their feeding trips recorded (Wanless et al., 1985; Wilson et al., 1986; Burger and Wilson, 1988; Wanless et al., 1992; Briggs et al., 1993; Weimerskirch and Robertson, 1994; Falk and Møller, 1995; Georges et al., 1997). These studies, despite the possible negative effects of some devices on foraging performance, have demonstrated that the feeding range of some seabirds is considerably greater than previously assumed, and that the diving depth of birds previously assumed to be surface feeders may be comparatively large. All of these studies indicate that assumptions on the size of foraging niches are usually too limited. Some studies may assume that a change in prey consumption by a predator population from one study to the next represents a change in the availability of the original prey stock. However, optimal diet models predict that predators will select the most ‘profitable’ prey in terms of yield per unit handling time of each food type encountered and rank this relative to profitabilities ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 of other types. The implication is that a forager should always accept the most profitable food type and that it should accept successively less profitable types only when encounter rates with higher ranking types fall below critical levels (Hughes, 1993). This would mean that the representation or the absence of a given prey in the diet could have been caused by changes in the availability of another prey species perhaps as a consequence of changes in the local abundance (Tollitt et al., 1997). Optimal diet theory predicts that the diet of a species should expand and contract according to the quality and availability of alternative foods. 3.3.1.1 Most frequently recorded food items Most seabirds, even those with highly specialised foraging methods, appear to feed on a great variety of prey types, though primarily on small pelagic fishes, squids and crustaceans (Montevecchi 1993). However, relatively few prey items are taken as staple foods (represented in at least 50% of the diet samples in a study), while many organisms are only rarely recorded in dietary studies. A survey of the available literature on seabird diets contained in SEABDIET 1.0 found that 13 prey species or groups have each been recorded in at least five studies as ‘staple food’ in any species of North Atlantic seabird, either in the form of discards from fisheries or as prey taken during more ‘natural’ feeding . Sandeels (in particular Ammodytes marinus), capelin Mallotus villosus, polar cod Boreogadus saida, clupeid fish (herring Clupea harengus and sprat Sprattus sprattus), a variety of small crustaceans (mainly Euphausiids and amphipods), and squid (usually unidentified Cephalopods, Loligo spp and Gonatus spp), in decreasing order of importance, were the most frequently encountered staple foods (at least 10 studies). Staple foods (>50% of the diet by mass) or common prey (26–50%), at any year of study in a given area, are in this study considered ‘preferred prey’, whereas infrequently taken prey items (2–25%) or rare prey are considered ‘alternative prey’. 3.3.1.2 Prey size The size of fish prey of North Atlantic seabirds generally varies between 100 and 300 mm, although larger as well as smaller prey are also taken (Table 3.1). Not surprisingly, larger seabirds tend to feed on larger prey than smaller species, as clearly demonstrated in the studies of the use of discards by scavenging seabirds in the North Sea (Table 3.2) (Camphuysen et al., 1995) but also in other multi-species diet studies (e.g., Swennen and Duiven, 1977; Knopf and Kennedy, 1981; Götmark, 1984; Sanger and Ainley, 1988; Camphuysen, 1990, 1996). There are notable exceptions. Gannets Morus bassanus, the largest seabird breeding in the North Atlantic, are capable of taking larger prey than most other seabirds (e.g., roundfish of 300–450 mm). They can, however, take small sandeels and capelin; these have been recorded as staple food in Scottish and ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Newfoundland colonies in response to the sometimes abundant supply of these fish in these areas (Montevecchi and Porter, 1980; Martin, 1989). Table 3.1. Size range (fish length in mm) of fish prey in some North Atlantic seabirds (SEABDIET 1.0 database). Species Min Red-throated diver Great northern diver Fulmar Gannet Shag Great skua Black-headed gull Common gull Lesser black-backed gull Herring gull Great black-backed gull Kittiwake Arctic tern Common tern Guillemot Brünnich's guillemot Razorbill Black guillemot Puffin 42 35 40 70 80 100 35 60 40 20 20 50 30 30 20 126 20 40 10 Max – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 200 500 330 550 160 360 210 210 470 530 450 360 160 160 270 184 237 220 170 These results show firstly that smaller scavenging seabirds under similar conditions select smaller food items than larger seabirds, and secondly that larger seabirds may select considerably larger roundfish than are generally available. It has been shown that the tendency for smaller seabirds to take small prey is at least partly motivated by the presence of other, more powerful scavengers or more dominant conspecifics. An increase in handling time would increase the risk that a fish was lost through kleptoparasitism (Hudson, 1989; Hudson and Furness, 1989). Size selection under natural conditions in foraging seabirds is an aspect which deserves more attention in future studies. 3.3.2 Annual variation There are few long-term studies of seabird diets. Examples of dietary change between years are more numerous and the following examples illustrate the scale of change which has been observed. Large changes in staple foods from one prey species/group to another are not uncommon in seabird populations. Changes in diet composition may be sudden or more gradual. Sudden changes are usually more easily linked with a drastic change in foraging conditions or prey abundance than are gradual changes. An excellent example of a combination of rather sudden and gradual shifts is provided by diet studies of great skuas Catharacta skua in Shetland (Furness, 1997). In the late 19 1970s, when the breeding population of great skuas on Foula reached its highest level ever, the diet of great skuas was dominated by sandeel (Table 3.3). After 1979, sandeels were suddenly considerably less important and over 50% of the samples studied comprised a mixture of whitefish, most probably obtained as discards. A shift from sandeel towards whitefish discards had been observed also in 1974 and 1975. Since 1983, seabird predation by great skuas has increased significantly. Interestingly, when sandeel gradually returned in the diet of great skuas in the 1990s, and while discards remained in the diet, the habit of bird predation persisted. The collapse of sandeel stocks around Shetland in the 1980s provided a number of examples of annual variation in seabird diet, involving several species of seabirds in a single area. Surface feeding birds, such as arctic terns Sterna paradisaea and kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla, experienced great difficulty in obtaining sufficient prey, and breeding failures or abandoned breeding attempts were widespread in the archipelago (Monaghan et al., 1989; Hamer et al., 1991, 1993). Other seabirds, such as the gannet, showed marked shifts in their diets in response to this crash towards a wider prey spectrum that included much herring and gadids (Martin, 1989). Species, such as the guillemot Uria aalge and shag Phalacrocorax aristotelis, which dive to pursue fish underwater, were hardly affected by the collapse and continued feeding chicks with sandeels and to reproduce with reasonably high fledging rates. Table 3.2. Median length (cm) of roundfish and median width of flatfish (0.5 cm) consumed by scavenging seabirds (arranged by body mass) in relation to the size of roundfish and flatfish offered in sessions of experimental discarding in the North Sea (from Camphuysen et al., 1995). Species body mass (g) roundfish consumed flatfish offered Kittiwake 300–500 15 18 Common gull 300–500 14 15 Fulmar 700–900 16 Lesser black-backed gull 700–1000 Herring gull consumed offered 3.5 6.5 18 3.5 6.5 18 18 4.5 6.5 800–1200 18 19 5.0 6.5 Great skua 1300–1800 25 19 Great black-backed gull 1100–2000 24 18 6.5 6.5 Gannet 2800–3200 25 19 6.5 6.5 Table 3.3. Representation of sandeel A. marinus, whitefish discards, birds and other prey (% frequency of occurrence in all samples studied per year) in the diet of great skuas on Foula (Shetland Islands), simplified after Furness (1997). Year sandeel discards birds other Year sandeel discards birds other 1973 71 27 2 0 1985 1 72 20 7 1974 24 71 5 0 1986 0 81 14 5 1975 21 69 6 4 1987 9 77 10 4 1976 72 26 2 0 1988 1 72 24 3 1977 59 35 4 2 1989 2 67 29 2 1978 64 35 1 0 1990 1 38 38 23 1979 41 54 3 2 1992 15 66 25 7 1980 17 74 6 3 1993 31 87 11 10 1981 18 77 4 1 1994 19 81 13 34 1982 13 80 3 4 1995 73 63 3 24 1983 9 70 17 4 1996 55 73 42 23 1984 0 74 23 3 20 ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 In northern Norway, changes in the stocks of capelin in the 1970s and 1980s were tracked by changes in breeding performance of seabirds in the area (Wright et al., 1996). In 1986, when the capelin stock was at its lowest, several species of seabird produced very few young. Massive declines in both the number of breeding guillemots at northern Norwegian colonies and of guillemots on their wintering grounds were recorded. Since 1989, capelin stocks have increased and bird numbers have started to recover. In this instance, there was no alternative in the late 1989s to capelin in the diet, so that switching was not possible. Since then, herring stocks have increased in the area, and this species has reappeared in bird diets. This may be a reversion to the situation in the 1930s and 1940s when Belopol'skii (1957) recorded herring as important constituent of the summer diet of many seabirds breeding in the region. importance of sandeels, clupeids and gadids in guillemot diets in the post- (August–October) and pre-breeding seasons (March–April). Camphuysen (1996) summarised published information on guillemot diets outside the breeding season in the North Sea and demonstrated consistent features, such as a greater importance of sandeels in late spring and early autumn, substantial use of prey that were available for only a short time (small scad in the southern North Sea), and a greater importance of clupeids and gadids in winter. Future versions of the diet database, SEABDIET, will facilitate a more detailed summary of seasonal changes in diets, for a considerably larger number of species. To achieve that, a substantial amount of so far unpublished data will need to be computer coded. 3.3.3 Seasonal variation Spatial variation in seabird diets is particularly interesting on the small scale, as it indicates that local populations use different, but perhaps overlapping, food resources. A demonstration of regional variation in seabird diets was provided by Lilliendahl and Solmundsson (1997), who described summer food consumption of six seabirds in Iceland (Table 3.5). For razorbill Alca torda, guillemot and Brünnich’s guillemot, sandeels predominated in the diet (>50% in percent wet prey mass) to the south, west and east of Iceland, while capelin was their main prey (generally >90% of wet prey mass) in the north-west and north-east. Euphausiids were of significance mainly for Brünnich’s guillemots, particularly to the east and north-west. Capelin formed nearly 100% of the prey of kittiwakes to the north, while sandeels predominated in the south and mixtures (capelin/sandeel and capelin/sandeel/Euphausiids and other prey) in respectively the west and east sectors. Fulmars Fulmarus glacialis have a more mixed diet in all sectors, although the overall trend of capelin consumption in the northern sectors and sandeels representing a significant part of the diet in the south and west can be seen also in this species. Much of this variation in seabird diet can be linked to oceanographic differences between regions. Much of the dietary work carried out on seabirds has been from or around colonies in the breeding season. Even within that window of courtship, incubation, raising chicks and fledging of young, rather radical shifts in the diet (both of adults and in the prey delivered to the chicks) have been demonstrated. For example, the gradually altering energetic demands of the growing chick(s) has to be met with by the provisioning adults (Harris and Wanless, 1986; Anker-Nilsson and Nygård, 1989; Annett and Pierotti, 1989; Beers and Habraken, 1993; Hill and Hamer, 1994; Anker-Nilssen and Øyan, 1995). So, even in the absence of obvious changes in food resources, there may be differences in the exploitation of their prey by seabirds, which have to meet constantly changing energy and nutrient requirements during breeding. In the post-breeding season, most seabirds become more mobile, because the constraints imposed by central place foraging are no longer in effect. In winter, the energetic requirements may be elevated due to harsh environmental conditions, such as severe storms or very cold weather. Even from a purely energetic point of view, seasonal changes in diet and food preferences are likely to occur. Since many fish are known to show rather different distribution and activity patterns in the course of a year (e.g., spawning, buried phases in sand, migration), dietary changes in seabirds will probably be even more obvious between the seasons. Elliot et al. (1990) demonstrated substantial changes in the diet of Brünnich’s guillemots Uria lomvia, such as shifts from predominantly fish in birds in the autumn to crustaceans in birds wintering off Newfoundland and Labrador (Table 3.4). Blake et al. (1985) produced similar information from various locations off the Scottish east coast, showing shifts in the relative ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 3.3.4 Spatial variation Because the birds studied by Lilliendahl and Solmundsson (1997) were shot at sea (presumably at or near feeding locations) rather than at colonies, these results show the use of a common resource by predators with different foraging capabilities and prey preferences. So, while capelin is virtually absent from the diet of the three auk species east of Iceland, both fulmars and kittiwakes still consumed considerable amounts of these fish. As the latter are surface foragers and the former are deep diving seabirds (but capable of feeding near the surface as well as over 100m deep), we might conclude that these auks prefer sandeel over capelin as prey in these waters. 21 Table 3.4. Seasonal changes in diets of Brünnich’s guillemots in Labrador and Newfoundland from birds shot at sea (% frequency in total number of stomachs examined per season per region), after Elliot et al. (1990). Study area Prey (genus/group) E Newfoundland Decapoda Euphausiacea Gammarus Hyperiidae Thysanoessa Boreogadus Gadus Mallotus Mollusca Nereis Cephalopoda Decapoda Euphausiacea Gammarus Hyperiidae Thysanoessa Boreogadus Gadus Mallotus Mollusca Cephalopoda Decapoda Euphausiacea Hyperiidae Boreogadus Gadus Mallotus Cephalopoda Decapoda Euphausiacea Gammarus Hyperiidae Parathemisto Thysanoessa Boreogadus Gadus Mallotus Nereis Decapoda Euphausiacea Gammarus Hyperiidae Boreogadus Gadus Mallotus Mollusca Cephalopoda Labrador NE Newfoundland S Newfoundland SE Newfoundland 22 Nov Dec 0 3 1 5 6 57 9 18 37 10 87 40 10 5 13 6 85 26 65 13 2 Jan 3 100 1 3 32 3 29 3 Feb 100 22 92 4 3 Mar 1 85 1 31 96 9 10 1 2 1 3 69 1 9 82 1 12 9 43 1 7 80 5 80 25 3 14 11 7 66 3 29 3 7 4 27 51 18 54 74 88 4 7 16 55 5 5 10 92 2 26 33 5 8 7 5 ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Table 3.5. Summer prey (% wet mass, rounded figures to nearest 5%) of seabirds feeding in five sectors off Iceland, as an example of spatial variation in diets. Shown are prey fractions representing at least 5% of wet mass (after Lilliendahl and Solmundsson (1997). Species Prey Fulmar Capelin Kittiwake South West North-west North-east East 5 25 15 45 40 5 10 Sandeel 60 Euphausiids 5 Other 35 55 70 75 45 Capelin 15 55 95 100 40 Sandeel 80 45 Euphausiids 5 10 35 10 Other Guillemot 5 Capelin Sandeel 30 90 Euphausiids Other Brunnich’s guillemot Razorbill 90 65 5 5 5 10 5 10 Sandeel 75 Euphausiids 5 25 Other 10 5 Capelin 10 95 95 5 90 Capelin Sandeel Puffin 90 15 70 100 50 80 50 95 5 100 Euphausiids 5 5 Capelin 30 25 65 20 5 10 5 40 45 5 5 Sandeel 100 Euphausiids Other Camphuysen et al. (1995) experimentally discarded fish from survey vessels in seven subregions in the North Sea and Skagerrak in four seasons. There was considerable variation in the selection of discarded items by different species of scavengers in different areas through the year in relation to the type and size of discards. Spatial variation in consumption rates (% of the discarded fraction of the fish caught actually taken by seabirds) showed that competition for fishery waste is considerably more intense in some areas and less in others. This variation could not always be explained by the relative abundance of scavenging seabirds in relation to the number of fishing vessels in those areas. Specific dietary preferences of species of birds meant that some species did not occur at fishing vessels in some seasons because other food resources were exploited instead. For example, kittiwakes were abundant and widespread all year round, but were most common scavenging around fishing vessels only in winter and autumn. The reverse ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 90 55 was true for the even more abundant fulmar, which obtained the greater part of discarded fish only in summer and spring (see also Camphuysen and Garthe, 1997). In brief, these studies demonstrated a mixture of spatial and seasonal trends in discard consumption by different seabirds, which was at least partly related to changes in dietary preferences or changing feeding opportunities in these birds. 3.4 Evidence for selection related to prey body condition The quality of prey varies both between species and within species. 23 3.4.1 Differential prey selection between species In an analysis of dietary selection, Harris and Hislop (1978) described the biomass and quality of various prey species fed to young puffins Fratercula arctica at ten colonies around Scotland during six years in the early 1970s. This dietary information was compared with the "availability" of these prey as described in experimental mid-water trawl catches made in areas off north and east Scotland. There are obvious methodological problems involved that are acknowledged by the authors. In terms of biomass, sandeels and sprats predominated in the diets of chicks at most colonies in most years. Rocklings Ciliata mustela and whiting Merlangius merlangus formed a more important part of the diet at western rather than eastern Scottish colonies. In calorific terms, large sprat (>100mm long) had a considerably higher energy density (10.9 kJ/g wet weight) than any other prey species and were twice the value of saithe and whiting (5.1 kJ/g and 4.05 kJ/g respectively). Between these limits, in decreasing order, came rockling, small sprats (43–93mm long), sandeels and small larval forms. The percentage fat increases significantly in both sprat and sandeel with the length of fish (Love, 1970). The diet of these puffin chicks, when looked at in calorific terms, accentuates the importance of sprat and devalues the importance of whiting. There was a broad similarity between the composition of trawl catches and puffin chick diets, with some exceptions. Sandeels were one hundred times as numerous as sprats in the trawl catches, but only three times as common in puffin chick loads, suggesting that puffins differentially select sprat. Rockling were uncommon in the trawl, but this may have been due to the young of this species living near the surface, above the level at which the trawl was fishing. Conversely, Norway pout Trisopterus esmarkii and long rough dab Hippoglossoides platessoides were common in the trawl, but only recorded once each in puffin diets. A later study, around the Isle of May off eastern Scotland, found that as the North Sea sprat stock declined, these were replaced in the diet by herring, whose stock was increasing (Hislop and Harris, 1985). 3.4.2 Differential selection of prey within species Several authors have suggested that seabirds may differentially select individuals of the same species with higher calorific values. The most obvious selection would be for different sized individuals of the same species (e.g., Harris and Hislop, 1978). Wright and Bailey (1993) showed that diving birds tended to bring in a higher proportion of older age-classes sandeels than would be expected if they were selecting fish randomly. Becker (unpubl.) examined the changes in size classes of fish brought to chicks by common terns at Wilhelmshaven. There was a clear and significant 24 difference in size of fish fed to chicks of different ages (Table 3.6) (Chi2 for herring/sprat = 78.1, p<0.001; Chi2 for smelt = 93.3, p<0.001). It may also be that seabirds prey selectively on ripe, prespawning fish rather than spent or non-spawning fish of the same size. Furness and Barrett (1985) found that guillemots at a colony in northern Norway took predominantly gravid female capelin, containing 6.6% lipid and 15.2% protein, which compared with spent fish containing only 2.5% lipid and 14% protein. These authors could not demonstrate whether guillemots prey selectively on the young ripe late-spawning capelin in the area or whether the behaviour of these capelin makes them more available to the birds. Montevecchi and Myers (1996) also indicate some prey selection by guillemots on Funk Island, Newfoundland. Almost all capelin delivered to chicks between 1977 and 1994 were gravid female, providing higher energy densities than found with male or spent female capelin (Montevecchi and Piatt, 1984). In contrast, Montevecchi and Myers (1996) found that gannets landed about equal proportions of male and female capelin. Guillemots hunt by pursuit diving underwater, so may have a greater opportunity to assess the state of individual fish than would the plungediving gannet. In addition, greater selectivity is to be expected among single prey loading species (e.g., guillemots or terns) than among multiple prey loading species (e.g., gannets, puffins). 3.5 Differences between adult and chick diet A simultaneous study of diet as assessed by three methods was carried out by Harris and Wanless (1993) on shags on the Isle of May in the Firth of Forth during the chick-rearing period. Regurgitated samples were collected from chicks, stomach contents of adults were sampled by flushing with water and mucous pellets (which contain hard parts of prey) were retrieved from a roost site. The roost site samples (mostly non- and failed breeders) were from a wider spectrum of prey than the chicks. Stomach contents of adults returning to feed chicks were very similar to those regurgitated by the chicks (i.e. almost entirely sandeels), however Wanless et al. (1993) concluded that adults ate a wide spectrum of fish from other fish families and probably digested these before returning to the colony. Fish in these families had low calorific densities compared to sandeels indicating that adults transported highest calorific items for their chicks. Courtship feeding of females by their mates is a feature of the biology of several seabirds. We contrasted the sizes of fish fed to common tern females and to chicks (Table 3.7). In general females were fed on a significantly wider size range of fish than were chicks (Chi2 for herring/sprat = 80.1, p<0.001; Chi2 for smelt Osmerus eperlanus = 70.2, p<0.001). ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Table 3.6. Proportions (%) of size classes (multiples of bill length) of fish fed to different ages of common tern chicks at Wilhelmshaven in 1995 (P.H. Becker, unpubl.). Smelt Age 0–7 days 8–14 days Sprat/herring >14 days 0–7 days 8–14 days >14 days Fish size class 1 19.7 2.7 2.9 37.7 15.3 3.6 2 62.5 48.1 36.5 56.9 60.2 60.8 >2 17.8 49.2 60.6 5.4 24.4 35.5 Sample size 152 187 170 130 98 166 Table 3.7. Proportions (%) of size classes (multiples of bill length) of fish fed to female and chick common terns at Wilhelmshaven in 1995 (P.H. Becker, unpubl.). Fish size class Smelt Sprat/herring Females Chicks Females Chicks 1 19.6 6.9 20.7 17.6 2 32.6 43.1 31.1 56.9 3 34.6 41.3 32.4 23.1 >3 13.2 8.7 15.8 2.5 Sample size 613 813 241 615 3.6 Discussion From the examples of annual, seasonal and spatial variation in seabird diets provided in this chapter it may seem that we have a reasonable overview of its variability in most common species of seabirds in the ICES area. In fact, this is not the case. Of 767 studies in which the study season was specified, 64% were conducted during the breeding season or in summer. Only 8% of all studies were conducted in the prebreeding season, 12% during post-breeding (early autumn) and 15% in winter. Logistic problems have prevented large scale studies of the diets of most pelagic seabirds outside the breeding season, simply because most birds are ‘out of reach’ (away from land). From the examples given earlier and from many published papers on variability in seabird diets, it should be emphasised that the results obtained in one area, in one season, in any one year are not necessarily valid with that same predator species in other circumstances. However, on the larger scale it will soon be possible to come up with some generalisations. There is no need to become side-tracked as a result of the immense variation in prey, since most items form only a very small part of the diet. Rather few species/types are ‘preferred’ prey for seabirds while very many should be labelled ‘occasional prey’. It is very important, however, that additional information is collected on seabird prey preferences, particularly outside the breeding season and away from the colonies. have tried to address the aspect of prey selection from a known resource of potential prey. There are very obvious methodological problems involved with the assessment of food resources (a function of prey stock size, suitability and availability) for piscivorous seabirds, but in the absence of any insight it remains speculative why certain seabirds rely on sandeels in one year and perhaps clupeids in the next. Size selection (e.g., Swennen and Duiven, 1977, 1991; Camphuysen et al., 1995), differential selection of prey of a certain ‘quality’ or calorific value (e.g., Harris and Hislop, 1978, Wright and Bailey, 1993) and prey choice or dietary shifts in relation to the prey stock (e.g., Doornbos, 1979; Vader et al., 1990) are very important aspects which all deserve a lot more attention in future studies. 3.7 References Anker-Nilssen, T., and Nygård, T. 1989. Notes on the food choice of adult and young guillemots Uria aalge during post-breeding migration in central Norway. Fauna Norvegica Series C, Cinclus, 10: 53–56. Anker-Nilssen, T., and Øyan, H. S. 1995. Hekkebiologiske langtidsstudier av lunder på Røst. NINA Fagrapport, 15. 48 pp. Annett, C., and Pierotti, R. 1989. Chick hatching as a trigger for dietary switching in the western gull. Colonial Waterbirds, 12: 4–11. A second point which should be highlighted, particularly from the fisheries point of view, is that very few studies ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 25 Beers, P. W. M. van, and Habraken, J. M. P. M. 1993. De invloed van getij, wind en leeftijd van de kuikens op de voedselaanvoer van de grote stern Sterna sandvicensis. Doctoraalverslag KU Nijmegen / Instituut voor Bos- en Natuuronderzoek, Arnhem, 23 pp. Belopol'skii, L. O. 1957. Ecology of sea colony birds of the Barents Sea. Israel Program of Scientific Translation 1961. 346 pp. Blake, B. F., Dixon, T. J., Jones, P. H., and Tasker, M. L. 1985. Seasonal changes in the feeding ecology of guillemots (Uria aalge) off north and east Scotland. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, 20: 559–568. Briggs, D. R., Prince, P. A., and Croxall, J. P. 1993. Movements and interactions of wandering albatrosses: the roles of satellite tracking and direct observations. Sea Swallow, 42: 41–44. Burger, A. E., and Wilson, R. P. 1988. Capillary-tube depth gauges for diving animals: an assessment of their accuracy and applicability. Journal of Field Ornithology, 59: 345–354. Camphuysen, C. J. 1990. Fish stocks, fisheries and seabirds in the North Sea. Technisch Rapport Vogelbescherming, 5. Vogelbescherming Nederland, Zeist. 122 pp. Camphuysen, C. J. 1996. De verspreiding van zeevogels in de Noordzee: naar een beter begrip van patronen en verbanden. Sula, 10(special issue 2): 41–88. Camphuysen, C. J., Calvo, B., Durinck, J., Ensor, K., Follestad, A., Furness, R. W., Garthe, S., Leaper, G., Skov, H., Tasker, M. L., and Winter, C. J. N. 1995. Consumption of discards by seabirds in the North Sea. Final report to the European Commission, study contract BIOECO/93/10, NIOZ–Report 1995–5, Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, Texel. 202 pp. Camphuysen, C. J., and Garthe, S. 1997. An evaluation of the distribution and scavenging habits of northern fulmars (Fulmarus glacialis) in the North Sea. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 54: 654–683. Coleridge, S. T. 1854. The rime of the ancient mariner. Doornbos G. 1979. Winter food habits of smew (Mergus albellus) on lake IJssel, The Netherlands: species and size selection in relation to fish stocks. Ardea, 67: 42–48. Duffy, D. C., and Jackson, S. 1986. Diet studies of seabirds: a review of methods. Colonial Waterbirds, 9: 1–17. 26 Elliot, R. D., Ryan, P. C., and Lidtser, W. W. 1990. The winter diet of thick-billed murres in coastal Newfoundland waters. In: Auks at sea, pp. 125–138. Ed. by S.G. Sealy, Studies in Avian Biology, 14. Falk, K., and Møller, S. 1995. Satellite tracking of higharctic northern fulmars. Polar Biology, 15: 495–502. Furness, R. W. 1997. The impact of predation by great skuas on other seabird species, with particular reference to Special Protection Areas in Shetland. Northern Isles Area Report for contract 5092AA, Scottish Natural Heritage, Lerwick. 99 pp. Furness, R. W., and Barrett, R. T. 1985. The food requirements and ecological relationships of a seabird community in North Norway. Ornis Scandinavica, 16: 305–313. Georges, J.-Y., Guinet, C., Jouventin, P., and Weimerskirch, H. 1997. Satellite tracking of seabirds: interpretation of activity pattern from the frequency of satellite locations. Ibis, 139: 403–405. Götmark, F. 1984. Food and foraging in five species of Larus gulls in the breeding season: a comparative review. Ornis Fennica, 61: 9–18. Hamer, K. C., Furness, R. W., and Caldow, R. W. G. 1991. The effects of changes in food availability on the breeding ecology of great skuas Catharacta skua in Shetland. Journal of Zoology, London, 223: 175– 188. Hamer, K. C., Monaghan, P. Uttley, J. D., Walton, P., and Burns, M. D. 1993. The influence of food supply on the breeding ecology of kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla in Shetland. Ibis, 135: 255–263. Harris, M. P., and Hislop, J. R. G. 1978. The food of young puffins Fratercula arctica. Journal of Zoology, London, 185: 213–236. Harris, M. P., and Wanless, S. 1986. The food of young razorbills on the Isle of May and a comparison with that of young guillemots and puffins. Ornis Scandinavica, 17: 41–46. Harris, M. P., and Wanless, S. 1993. The diet of shags Phalacrocorax aristotelis during the chick-rearing period assessed by three methods. Bird Study, 40: 135–139. Hill, J. K., and Hamer, K. C. 1994. Do great skuas Catharacta skua respond to changes in the nutritional needs of their chicks? Seabird, 16: 3–7. Hislop, J. G., and Harris, M. P. 1985. Recent changes in the food of young puffins Fratercula arctica on the Isle of May in relation to fish stocks. Ibis, 127: 234– 239. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Hudson, A. V. 1989. Interspecific and age-related differences in the handling time of discarded fish by scavenging seabirds. Seabird, 12: 40–44. Hudson, A. V., and Furness, R. W. 1989. The behaviour of seabirds foraging at fishing boats around Shetland. Ibis, 131: 225–237. Hughes, R. N. 1993. Diet selection: an interdisciplinary approach to foraging behaviour. Blackwell, London. 232 pp. Knopf, F. L., and Kennedy, J. L. 1981. Differential predation by two species of piscivorous birds. Wilson Bulletin, 93: 554–556. Lilliendahl, K., and Solmundsson, J. 1997. An estimate of summer food consumption of six seabird species in Iceland. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 54: 624– 630. Love, R. M. 1970. The chemical biology of fishes. Academic Press, London. 547 pp. Martin, A. R. 1989. The diet of the Atlantic puffin Fratercula arctica and northern gannet Sula bassana chicks at a Shetland colony during a period of changing prey availability. Bird Study, 36:170–180. Monaghan, P., Uttley, J. D., Burns, M. D., Thaine, C., and Blackwood, J. 1989. The relationship between food supply, reproductive effort and breeding success in arctic terns Sterna paradisaea. Journal of Animal Ecology, 58: 261–274. Montevecchi, W. A. 1993. Birds as indicators of change in marine prey stocks. In: Birds as monitors of environmental change, pp. 217–266. Ed. by R. W. Furness and J. J. D. Greenwood. Chapman and Hall, London. Sanger, G. A., and Ainley, D. G. 1988. Review of the distribution and feeding ecology of seabirds in the oceanic subarctic North Pacific Ocean. Bulletin of Ocean Research Institute, University of Tokyo, 26: 161–186. Swennen, C., and Duiven, P. 1977. Size of food objects of three fish-eating seabird species: Uria aalge, Alca torda, and Fratercula arctica (Aves, Alcidae). Netherlands Journal of Sea Research, 11: 92–98. Swennen C., and Duiven P. 1991. Diving speed and food-size selection in common guillemots Uria aalge. Netherlands Journal of Sea Research, 27: 191– 196. Tasker, M. L., and Furness, R. W. 1996. Estimation of food consumption by seabirds in the North Sea. In: Seabird/fish interactions, with particular reference to seabirds in the North Sea, pp 6–42. Ed. by G. L. Hunt, and R. W. Furness. ICES Cooperative Research report No. 216. Tollitt, D. J., Greenstreet, S. P. R., and Thompson, P. M. 1997. Prey selection by harbour seals Phoca vitulina in relation to variations in prey abundance. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 75: 1508–1518. Vader W., Barrett R. T., Erikstad K. E. and Strann K. B. 1990. Differential responses of common and thickbilled murres Uria spp. to a crash in the capelin stock in the southern Barents Sea. In: Auks at sea, pp. 175– 180. Ed. by S. G. Sealy. Studies in Avian Biology 14. Wanless, S., Corfield, T., and Buckland, S. T. 1992. Diving behaviour of shags Phalacrocorax aristotelis in relation to habitat and prey. In: European seabirds, Proceedings of the Seabird Group conference, Glasgow 27–29 March 1992, p. 26. Ed. by M. L. Tasker, Seabird Group, Sandy. Montevecchi, W. A., and Myers, R. A. 1996. Dietary changes of seabirds indicate shifts in pelagic food webs. Sarsia, 80: 313–322. Wanless, S., Harris, M. P., and Morris, J. A. 1985. Radio-monitoring as a method for estimating time budgets of guillemots Uria aalge. Bird Study, 32: 170–175. Montevecchi, W. A. and Piatt, J. 1984. Composition and energy contents of mature inshore spawning capelin (Mallotus villosus): implications for seabird predators. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A, 78: 15–20. Wanless, S., Harris, M. P., and Russell, A. F. 1993. Factors influencing food load sizes brought in by shags Phalocrocorax aristotelis during chick rearing. Ibis, 135: 19–24. Montevecchi, W. A., and Porter, J. M. 1980. Parental investments by seabirds at the breeding area with emphasis on northern gannets, Morus bassanus. In: behavior of marine animals vol. 4, pp 323–365. Ed. by J. Burger, B. L. Olla, and H. E. Winn. Plenum, London. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Weimerskirch, H., and Robertson, G. 1994. Satellite tracking of light-mantled sooty albatross. Polar Biology, 14: 123–126. Wilson, R. P., Grant, W. S., and Duffy, D. C. 1986. Recording devices on free-ranging marine animals: does measurement affect foraging performance? Ecology, 67: 1091–1093. 27 Wright, P. J., and Bailey, M. C. 1993. Biology of sandeels in the vicinity of seabird colonies at Shetland. Fisheries Research Services Report 15/93. Marine Laboratory, Aberdeen. 64 pp. 28 Wright, P., Barrett, R. T., Greenstreet, S. P. R., Olsen, B., and Tasker, M. L. 1996. Effect of fisheries for small fish on seabirds in the eastern Atlantic. In: Seabird/fish interactions, with particular reference to seabirds in the North Sea, pp 44–55. Ed. by G. L. Hunt, and R. W. Furness ICES Cooperative Research report No. 216. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 4 Evaluation of the role of discards in supporting bird populations and their effects on the species composition of seabirds in the North Sea S. Garthe1, U. Walter2, M. L. Tasker3, P. H. Becker4, G. Chapdelaine5 and R. W. Furness6 1 Institut für Meereskunde, Düsternbrooker Weg 20, 24105 Kiel, Germany. Forschungzentrum Terramre, Schleusenstrasse 1, 26382 Wilhelmshaven, Germany. 3 Joint Nature Conservation Committee, 7 Thistle Place, Aberdeen AB10 1UZ, U.K. 4 Institut für Vogelforschung, Vogelwarte Helgoland, An der Vogelwarte 21, D–26386 Wilhelmshaven, Germany. 5 Canadian Wildlife Service, 1141 route de l’Eglise, PO Box 10100, 9th floor, Ste-Foy, Quebec G1V 4H5, Canada. 6 Institute of Biomedical and Life Sciences, Graham Kerr Building, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, U.K. 2 4.1 Introduction In this report, we use the term discards to describe the animal waste generated by fishing operations which is jettisoned at sea. This therefore includes undersized fish and shellfish, fish which cannot be taken to market because quotas are exceeded or the catch is of low relative value to other hauls etc., offal and waste from cleaning fish at sea and other biota such benthos. The amounts of discards (including offal) from offshore fisheries in the North Sea have been evaluated by several workers. Recent evaluations were summarised by ICES (1996). Garthe et al. (1996) compiled information from a variety of sources on the amounts discarded in six sections of the North Sea (Table 4.1). 4.1.1 The shrimp fishery off Niedersachsen, Germany Shrimping is the most important fishing activity off Niedersachsen. The fleet consists of 118 cutters (Prawitt, 1995), which fish between March and November/December (Gubernator, 1994) for the brown shrimp Crangon crangon (5–8 cm body length). Shrimping is carried out with beam trawls close to the coast and inside the Wadden Sea. Large numbers of undersized shrimps, other benthic invertebrates and fish species are incidentally caught owing to the poor selectivity of the fine meshed shrimp nets (minimum mesh opening 20 mm). In order to quantify total amounts discarded in three categories (undersized shrimps, other invertebrates and fish) the discard to commercial shrimp mass ratios in 103 unsorted catch samples (November 1992–November 1993) were analysed (Walter, 1997). These ratios, combined with the landings statistics of brown shrimps for the same month, was used as a basis to estimate the total amount of discards from the shrimp fleet of Niedersachsen in the main part of the fishing season of 1993. Shrimps of marketable size comprised 11 % of mass of the catch, the remainder was mostly undersized shrimps (64 %), other invertebrates (8 %) and fish (11 %). The most abundant fish were flatfish such as plaice Pleuronectes platessa, flounder Platichthys flesus and dab Limanda limanda, and roundfish such as clupeids and gadids. Among the invertebrates, shore crab Carcinus maenus and swimming crab Liocarcinus holasadus were most frequent (Walter, 1997). Table 4.1. Estimated quantities of discards and offal in six sub regions (see Figure 4.1) in North Sea offshore trawl fisheries in 1990 (in tonnes) (Garthe et al., 1996, see also ICES, 1996) and the SE North Sea shrimp fisheries. Roundfish Flatfish Elasmobranchs Benthic invertebrates Offal Total NW 54,890 13,130 3,380 7,760 11,750 90,910 NE 53,310 14,290 3,270 8,270 11,450 90,590 CW 26,760 14,960 1,610 7,860 5,970 57,160 C 48,010 61,450 2,710 30,580 11,690 154,440 CE 48,520 68,230 2,710 33,820 11,990 165,270 S 30,710 127,240 1,320 61,410 9,950 230,630 SE shrimp fishery 10,800 8,000 0 137,800 0 156,600 273,000 307,300 15,000 287,500 62,800 945,600 Total ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 29 Figure 4.1. Map of the six sub regions of the North Sea used by Garthe et al. (1996). The monthly median of the ratio of undersized to marketable shrimps varied considerably (between 1:2– 1:10), with the lowest value in spring and the highest ratio in August (Figure 4.2). The majority of undersized shrimp are discarded alive. The proportion of invertebrates (other than brown shrimps) to marketable shrimps varied between 0.05:1 and 1.1:1. The equivalent ratios for fish showed less variation (0.5:1–1.4:1) than invertebrates (excluding undersized shrimps) (Walter, 1997). Total discards of approximately 4,000 tonnes of fish (1,750 t of flatfish and 2,290 t of roundfish), 27,000 tonnes of undersized shrimps and a further 2,000 tonnes of other invertebrate species were calculated for the shrimper fleet in the main fishing season (April– November) in 1993. 30 There is no direct information on discards from shrimp fisheries elsewhere in the North Sea. Shrimping is carried out off the coasts of France, Belgium, England, and the three Wadden Sea countries (Netherlands, Germany and Denmark). The results of the study off Niedersachen might be extrapolated to the remainder of the brown shrimp fishery off the Wadden Sea coast of the North Sea, in order to provide an approximate estimate of total bycatch. The total landings of brown shrimps in the coastal area of the Wadden Sea average to 20,000 tonnes per year (1983–1992) (Lozàn, 1994). If the mean discards/marketable shrimp ratios in the catch samples off Niedersachsen (0.4 for flatfish, 0.54 for roundfish, 6.4 for undersized shrimps and 0.49 for other invertebrates) is applied to the rest of the fishery, then a total of more than 150,000 tonnes of discards would be produced by all shrimpers of the three countries (Table 4.1). ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 It should be noted that Table 4.1 does not include amounts discarded from a number of inshore fisheries (e.g., shrimp fisheries off countries other than those of the Wadden Sea), from static gear fisheries or from industrial fisheries (likely to be relatively small amounts). The total amount of fishery waste discarded in the North Sea probably exceeds 1,000,000 tonnes. 4.2 Consumption of discards by seabirds 4.2.1 Offshore fisheries in the North Sea The proportion of discards consumed by seabirds in the North Sea was studied experimentally by Camphuysen et al. (1995) (summarised in Table 4.2). These proportions are broken down by species to quantify tonnages of five categories of discard (offal, roundfish, flatfish, elasmobranchs and benthic invertebrates) consumed by the most important scavenging seabird species in the North Sea (Table 4.3 based on Camphuysen et al., 1995; Garthe et al., 1996), based on the numbers of discard items consumed by birds. Calculations using discard mass as the basis would certainly lead to somewhat different results since, for instance, kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla take the smallest roundfish and gannets Morus bassanus the largest roundfish (Camphuysen et al., 1995). Inshore shrimp fisheries off Niedersachsen (Lower Saxony) In the coastal area off Niedersachsen, scavenging seabirds follow shrimp trawlers in large numbers throughout the whole fishing season (Walter and Becker, 1997). Up to 3,000 birds may be found astern of an individual shrimper (Berghahn and Rösner, 1992; Walter and Becker, 1994, 1997). The main scavenging species are herring gull Larus argentatus and black-headed gull L. ridibundus, which together represent 93% of all recorded birds (Walter and Becker, 1997). Both species showed the same seasonal pattern, with low numbers until June and larger numbers in late summer and autumn. Common gulls L. canus, lesser L. fuscus and great black-backed gulls L. marinus and common terns Sterna hirundo and arctic terns S. paradisaea were less numerous than herring and blackheaded gulls. Common gulls occurred throughout the whole fishing season, but only in substantial numbers behind shrimpers in March and in autumn. Lesser blackbacked gulls and common/arctic terns were summer visitors and occurred in relatively low numbers between April and September. Great black-backed gulls were scarce before July, increasing slightly in numbers in late summer and autumn. Table 4.2. Proportion of experimental discards and offal consumed by birds (in %) in six offshore regions (all seasons) and four seasons (all sub regions), respectively, in the North Sea offshore trawl fisheries (from Garthe et al., 1996), and in the shrimp fishery of Niedersachsen (Walter, 1997). Roundfish Flatfish Elasmobranchs Benthic invertebrates Offal Sample size NW 90 28 12 9 99 9,132 NE 89 41 12 3 98 3,281 CW 84 32 12 1 92 5,316 C 75 14 12 1 90 8,519 CE 63 10 12 3 54 3,396 S 71 8 12 4 100 1,200 Winter 92 35 12 17 100 6,028 Spring 76 22 12 8 94 10,354 Summer 70 10 12 3 94 8,526 Autumn 82 20 12 3 97 5,936 21,848 2,345 34 902 5,715 30,844 79 41 sample size Shrimp fishery ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 23 (excl. shrimp) 4291 31 30 A: undersized shrimps Mass ratio of discard category: commercial shrimps 20 10 0 12 B: other invertebrates 8 4 0 5 4 C: fish 3 2 1 0 Month Apr N samples 9 May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct 13 15 15 15 15 12 Nov 9 Figure 4.2. Average seasonal discards/commercial shrimp ratio of three main discard components, undersized shrimps, other invertebrates and fish (April–November 1993, total number of catch samples = 103) (from Walter, 1997). Table 4.3. Tonnes of discards consumed by seabird species from the North Sea offshore fisheries as a whole (based on Garthe et al., 1996; Camphuysen et al., 1995; Walter and Becker, 1997). Offal Roundfish Flatfish Elasmobranchs Benthic invertebrates Total Fulmar 39,800 53,400 4,500 200 6,300 104,200 Gannet 300 35,900 15,300 200 0 51,700 Great skua 100 2,000 0 0 0 2,100 0 100 0 0 0 100 100 800 100 0 0 900 Lesser black-backed gull 1,300 14,500 6,200 1,100 500 23,300 Herring gull 2,600 21,100 5,100 0 500 29,300 300 12,600 4,800 200 600 18,500 Kittiwake 10,500 66,000 2,200 400 1,100 80,200 Total 55,000 206,000 38,000 2,100 9,000 310,000 Black-headed gull Common gull Great black-backed gull 32 ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Feeding rates by number of items consumed were determined following the method of Hudson and Furness (1988). Differences between the length distribution of commercial and experimental discards were compensated for (Walter and Becker, 1997). In total, 5,500 tonnes of discards from the shrimper fleet of Niedersachsen were consumed by the birds in 1993. This comprised 41% of the discarded flatfish mass (=710 tonnes), 79% of roundfish (=1,820 tonnes), 23% of four invertebrate species (Carcinus maenas, Liocarcinus holasadus, Asterias rubens, Allotheutis subulata; 420 t) and 10% of the undersized shrimps (2,500 t). 4.3 Diets of seabirds that scavenge discards in the North Sea Discards form only a proportion of the diet of seabirds in the North Sea. Full quantification of seabird diet has not been carried out, but it is known that this proportion varies by species, by location and by season. Based on a compilation of many studies, Tasker and Furness (1996) make some assumptions on diets for an input to a model of North Sea fish consumption by seabirds. Their results for the main scavenging species are summarised in Table 4.4. 4.4 Numbers of seabirds supported by discards in the North Sea In order to assess how many seabirds can be sustained from discards and offal, Garthe et al. (1996) derived an "average scavenger community" from seabird counts (Camphuysen et al., 1995). This is based on the typical composition of those eight common seabird species known to consume fishery waste regularly and is calculated in proportion to the numerical and seasonal abundance of the species in the North Sea There are considerable variations in the distribution of the scavengers in the North Sea, with respect to both area and season (Camphuysen et al., 1995; Stone et al., 1995). Fulmars Fulmarus glacialis are most numerous in the north (particularly around Shetland), with much lower numbers in the south and east. Highest numbers are present in late summer/early autumn. Gannets leave the North Sea in autumn and winter as do lesser blackbacked gulls. Herring gulls and great black-backed gulls, in contrast, move into the North Sea during the winter. Kittiwakes are also highly numerous, but stay in the North Sea in considerable number the entire year. Common gulls are present only in winter in the south and the eastern parts, black-headed gulls are scarce in offshore areas at all times, in contrast to inshore areas of the south-eastern North Sea where they are common (Stone et al., 1995; Berghahn and Rösner, 1992; Walter and Becker, 1997). About 5.9 million individuals in the North Sea scavenging seabird community could possibly be sustained by offshore fisheries (this figure assumes that all offal and discarded organisms are consumed by ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 seabirds – an assumption supported only by some discard experiments (Garthe et al., 1996)). Discarding is not uniform, thus different numbers of varying species might be supported in separate parts of the North Sea. Garthe et al. (1996) divided the offshore areas into six sub regions (Figure 4.1). The largest number of seabirds that could potentially be supported by fishery waste is in sub region S (1,500,000), followed by CE (1,200,000) and C (1,100,000). Lower numbers might be supported by fisheries in sub regions NW and NE (800,000 individuals in each of the two regions) and CW (500,000) (Garthe et al., 1996). Additionally, the shrimp fishery in inshore waters off Niedersachsen supports a large number of seabirds. The consumed part of the shrimper discards represents an energy value of 2.5 x 1013J per year (Walter and Becker, 1997). The mean daily energy demand of a 'model' seabird (species energy demand may be weighed against their relative frequency astern the shrimpers) amounts to 1,145 kJ or to 418,000 kJ/year. A total of 60,000 birds may potentially have been supported by the discards of the fleet off Niedersachsen in 1993. In the south-eastern North Sea shrimp fishery, consumption rates by mass were applied to the estimated discard quantities. A total consumption of 27,000 tonnes of all discard categories were calculated. The most important scavenger species were herring gulls which took 55% of all consumed discards, and black-headed gulls (39%). Using standardised energy content of the different discard categories (Walter and Becker, 1997) the total amount consumed by seabirds represents an energy value of 1.22 x 1014J. This amount of energy is sufficient to support a potential number of about 340,000 birds (Table 4.5). 4.5 Direct effects of discard consumption on species composition of seabirds in the North Sea 4.5.1 Increase in population size of seabird species About 30% of total food consumed by seabirds in the North Sea is estimated to be discards (including offal) (Tasker and Furness, 1996). These foods are therefore of direct importance in sustaining populations of some seabirds. Furness and Hislop (1981) showed that discards formed up to 70 % of the diet of adult great skuas breeding in Shetland and 28 % of chick diet even when their preferred prey, lesser sandeels Ammodytes marinus, were abundant. When sandeel abundance declined in the late 1980s, discards formed up to 82 % of adult diet and 77 % of chick diet (Hamer et al., 1991) (Table 4.6). Breeding success was much reduced in the absence of sandeels (Furness, 1987) and chick growth rate is considerably reduced when the proportion of discards in the diet is high (Table 4.7). 33 Table 4.4. Foods consumed by seabirds which scavenge discards in the North Sea (after Tasker and Furness, 1996 and Walter and Becker, 1997). Species Discards and offal Other food Fulmar (summer) 30% offal, 30% discards 10% zooplankton, 30% sandeels 50% offal, 25% discards 25% zooplankton Gannet 10% discards 30% sandeels, 30% herring, 30% mackerel Great skua1 62% discards 26% sandeel, 10% birds, 2% other Black-headed gull2 10% discards 50% other, 40% terrestrial food Common gull2 10% discards 50% other, 40% terrestrial food Lesser black-backed gull2 60% discards 40% other Herring gull 10% offal, 30% discards 30% invertebrates, 30% terrestrial foods Great black-backed gull 60% discards 20% sandeels, 20% other prey (winter) Kittiwake IVa W (summer) (winter) 100% sandeels 25% offal, 25% discards 25% zooplankton, 25% sprat, IVa E, IVb, IVc (summer) (winter) 20% zooplankton, 60% sandeels, 20% sprat 25% offal, 25% discards 25% zooplankton, 25% sprat Notes: 1. A 16 year average from non-breeding birds, based on studies on breeding grounds (Hamer et al., 1991). 2. Estimates from Arbouw and Swennen (1985), Dernedde (1993), Freyer (1995), Gorke (1990), Hartwig et al. (1990), Noordhuis and Spaans (1992), Spaans et al. (1994). Table 4.5. Total numbers of seabird that could theoretically be supported by discards and offal in the North Sea (offshore fisheries: from Garthe et al., 1996; shrimp fisheries: Walther and Becker, 1997). offshore fisheries Fulmar 3,200,000 0 Gannet 210,000 0 21,000 0 0 204,000 84,000 7,000 Lesser black-backed gull 130,000 4,000 Herring gull 670,000 115,000 Great black-backed gull 250,000 0 1,300,000 0 0 9,000 5,900,000 339,000 Great skua Black-headed gull Common gull Kittiwake Common/arctic tern Total However, with the exception of these cases, there is limited evidence that fishery waste forms the essential part of the diet of any other population of seabirds. Nevertheless, the availability of discards is believed to affect feeding strategies of the scavengers. For instance, Blaber et al. (1995) suspect that the greater availability of discards of similar taxa may have led to greater overlap in the diets of the seabird species of the Northern Great Barrier Reef, Australia. Blaber et al. (1995) also found that the diet of several species changed due to the supply by discards, which has occurred also in the North 34 shrimp fisheries Sea (e.g., Hudson, 1986; Camphuysen, 1993; Walter and Becker, 1997). Since fisheries are carried out throughout the study area and throughout the year, interrupted only locally during gales and storms, one is rarely able to demonstrate any effects of fishing activities on feeding ecology and reproductive output of discard consumers. This might be the reason for the weak link between studies showing the utilisation of discards at sea and studies focusing on possible effects of fishing activities.The distribution of scavenging birds, both on land and at sea, is affected by the availability of discards. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Fishing activity strongly enhanced the number of Audouin's gulls Larus audouinii resting on the Columbrete Islands off east Spain (Castilla and Pérez, 1995), and herring and great black-backed gulls on Helgoland, south-eastern North Sea (Geiss, 1994; Hüppop, 1995). Table 4.6. Food items in pellets produced by non-breeding great skua on Foula between 1 and 15 July, for the years from 1973 to 1989 except 1985 (from Hamer et al., 1991). Year n sandeel (%) Whitefish (%) (mostly discard) bird (%) other (%) 1973 100 71 27 2 0 1974 100 24 71 5 0 1975 100 21 69 6 4 1976 100 72 26 2 0 1977 100 59 35 4 2 1978 100 64 35 1 0 1979 100 41 54 3 2 1980 100 17 74 6 3 1981 100 18 77 4 1 1982 100 13 80 3 4 1983 305 9 70 17 4 1984 100 0 74 23 3 1986 200 0 82 14 5 1987 98 9 77 10 4 1988 200 0 73 24 4 1989 247 4 62 30 4 Table 4.7. The relationship between an index of growth for skua chicks and the proportion of discards in their diet (data from Hamer et al., 1991). Year % Discard Chick growth index Year 1975 28 30 1983 2 3 1976 14 –18 1984 33 4 1977 14 0 1985 33 7 1978 24 28 1986 30 5 1979 24 26 1987 42 –44 1980 28 8 1988 77 –129 1981 6 –40 1989 76 –62 1982 5 15 The food provided by discards may be of importance particularly during periods of low natural food availability. There may therefore be positive effects on body condition, survival (including overwinter survival) of adult and sub-adult birds as well as on reproductive parameters such as the onset of laying, egg size, clutch size, chick growth, chick survival and breeding success. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 % Discard Chick growth index Discards may lower the costs of reproduction for adults, such that survival and the future reproductive potential might increase. Examples from the Mediterranean have documented various effects of the availability of discards and offal on breeding phenology, reproductive output, foraging range, 35 diet, activity and behavioural interactions of Audouin's, yellow-legged Larus cachinnans and lesser black-backed gulls breeding on the Ebro Delta, north-east Spain (e.g., Arcos and Oro, 1996; Oro, 1995, 1996; Oro and Martinez-Vilalta, 1994; Oro et al., 1995, 1996; Ruiz et al., 1996). During the late 1980s, many seabirds in Shetland failed to breed successfully due to low availability of sandeels. Only one kittiwake colony (Eshaness) fledged chicks successfully. This colony was mainly feeding on discards (Hamer et al., 1993). Removal of fishing offal as a food source has been shown to be associated with lagged population declines in herring and great black-backed gulls in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Canada (Howes and Montevecchi, 1992). 4.5.2 Population increase and changes in composition of seabird communities There have been considerable changes in the breeding populations of seabird species in the North Sea during the past century. There have further been changes in species composition. While many species which consume discards have increased their populations, it is difficult to discriminate between the effects of discards and other factors such as enhanced bird protection and increased stocks of small fish. The populations of some species groups, such as the terns, which had been the most numerous species on the southern North Sea coasts in the beginning of the century, have decreased in size (e.g., Becker and Erdelen, 1987), which may be an indirect effect of the increase in gull numbers. The numbers of most scavenging seabird species breeding in eastern Britain have increased markedly since at least 1900 (Table 4.8). In the southern North Sea, breeding numbers of offshore feeding seabirds such as kittiwakes and fulmars have shown strong population increases (e.g., kittiwakes: from a few pairs in the early 1950s to 7,460 pairs in 1995; Hüppop, 1995). Herring gull numbers increased in Germany from about 7,000 pairs in 1910 to 45,600 pairs in 1995 (Vauk et al., 1989; 36 Hälterlein and Südbeck, 1996). Herring gulls in the Netherlands increased from around 20,000 pairs in 1940 to 90,000 pairs in 1992 (Noordhuis and Spaans, 1992; Dijk and Meininger, 1995). Lesser black-backed gulls increased in the Netherlands from first breeding in the Wadden Sea in 1926 to 34,200 pairs in 1992 (Dijk and Meininger, 1995) with an additional 12,000 pairs in Germany in 1995 (Hälterlein and Südbeck, 1996). Blackheaded gulls started to use the German Wadden Sea as breeding area during the 1940s. Today this gull is the most numerous seabird in the Wadden Sea (64,000 pairs in Germany in 1995; Hälterlein and Südbeck, 1996; 170,000 pairs in the Netherlands in 1992, including inland colonies; Dijk and Meininger, 1995). Fisher (1953) and Tuck (1961) considered that the discards of factory trawlers on the Grand Bank of Newfoundland were responsible for the increase in fulmars and kittiwakes in the British Isles prior to the 1950s. Herring gulls and black-headed gulls are the main avian consumers of the discards of the shrimp fishery. In Denmark, herring gull numbers increased five years after the development of the Danish fisheries (Møller, 1981). From 1973 to 1982 both the landings of the German shrimp fishery and the discards produced by the shrimpers increased in parallel with the gull populations (Figure 4.3). Thereafter the gull populations continued to grow despite lower shrimp landings; possibly the amount of fishing continued to increase, but the catch of marketable shrimps per unit effort decreased with a consequential increase in amounts of discards. The increase in populations of discard-feeding seabirds around the North Sea has changed the balance of seabird communities towards these species. In the German Wadden Sea in 1951, the gulls (herring, lesser blackbacked, common and black-headed) comprised 40% of the seabird community (44,300 pairs) and terns (common, arctic, Sandwich Sterna sandvicensis and little S. albifrons) the remaining 60% (Becker and Erdelen, 1987). By 1995, gulls dominated the seabirds breeding community with 83 % of the total (155,000 pairs) (Hälterlein and Südbeck, 1996). ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Table 4.8. Numbers of pairs of scavenging seabirds breeding on North Sea coasts (Furness, 1992). a) Northeast Britain (Shetland, Orkney, Caithness to Cruden Bay) Year Fulmar Gannet Great skua Lesser blackbacked gull 1900 600 3500 41 (3000) (2000) 1910 1760 3500 82 (2000) 1920 5200 3500 193 1930 11600 3500 1940 28200 1950 Herring gull Great blackbacked gull Kittiwake All species (1000) (26000) (37000) (3000) (1500) (34000) (46000) (1500) (4000) (2000) (48000) (64000) 429 (1500) (5000) (3000) (68000) (93000) 8000 745 (1500) (10000) (4000) (90000) (142000) 53000 8800 1350 (1500) (20000) (6000) (120000) (211000) 1960 66000 10000 2100 (1500) 40000 8000 160000 290000 1970 190000 14000 4000 1500 82000 9600 230000 531000 1980 280000 20000 6300 2500 43000 9900 210000 572000 1990 (350000 24000 7500 2500 40000 9900 180000 614000) b) East coast of Britain from Cruden Bay to the Humber Year Fulmar Gannet Lesser blackbacked gull 1900 0 2800 (2000?) 1910 0 3000 1920 20 1930 Great blackbacked gull Kittiwake All species (400?) (10?) (9000) (14000?) – (800) – (12000) (18000?) 3500 – (1500) – (19000) (26000?) 200 4100 – (3000) – (28000) (37000?) 1940 600 4400 – 6000 – 38000 (50000) 1950 1200 4800 4000 12000 30 50000 72000 1960 2000 6800 4000 23000 30 65000 101000 1970 5800 8100 4240 45100 31 106000 169000 1980 10000 20000 5000 40000 20 200000 275000 1990 (14000 24000 5300 35000 20 210000 288000) ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Herring gull 37 Figure 4.3. Development of the gull populations in 28 areas along the German North Sea coast (Becker and Erdelen, 1987, P.H. Becker, unpubl. data) and landings of edible shrimps of the fleets of Niedersachsen and Schleswig-Holstein (Tiews, 1983; Tiews and Wienbeck, 1990; Anon., 1990/94) between 1968–1992 (from Walter and Becker, 1996). 4.6 Indirect effects of discard consumption on species composition of seabirds in the North Sea The increase in population size of gulls supported by discards may have negative effects of other species of sea- and shorebirds. This may happen through various mechanisms. Nesting gulls may physically displace other species by occupying their habitat. Larger predatory species may depredate smaller species taking eggs, young and adults (Regehr and Montevecchi, 1996). In the Wadden Sea the nesting habitat of shorebirds such as plovers and oystercatchers has been invaded by large gulls. Some breeding sites which are well suited for nesting by habitat or food availability may no longer be available for the terns because of the occupation by gulls earlier in the season. The Wadden Sea islands of Memmert and Mellum were important breeding sites for terns at the start of this century – nowadays more than 10,000 pairs of herring gulls and no terns breed on these islands (Becker and Erdelen, 1987). Howes and Montevecchi (1992) describe a similar situation off Canada. Frequently, terns can only breed close to gulls, thus increasing the probability of predation. Common terns became re-established on Mellum at the end of the 1970s. This was not successful as herring gulls depredated most tern chicks which led to very low reproductive output for five years. Subsequently the colony site was abandoned (Becker, 1995). There are many other examples of reduced reproductive output of 38 small seabird species caused by gulls feeding on eggs or chicks (e.g., Kruuk, 1964; Hatch, 1970; Montevecchi, 1977; Wanless, 1988; Hario, 1994; Thiel and Sommer, 1994; Russell and Montevecchi, 1996; Regehr and Montevecchi, 1996). In Shetland and Orkney, great skuas Catharacta skua rely on discards and sandeels for most of their diet, but will switch to killing other seabirds if sandeels and discards are in short supply, threatening the viability of some seabird populations (Furness, 1997; Heubeck et al., 1997). 4.7 References Anonymous 1990/94. Die kleine Hochsee- und Küstenfischerei Niedersachens und Bremens im Jahr 1989/1990/1991/1992/1993/1994 - Jahresbericht des Staatlichen Fischereiamtes Bremerhaven. Fi. Bl. div. Jahrgänge. Arbouw, G. J., and Swennen, C. 1985. Het voedsel van de stormmeeuw Larus canus op Texel. Limosa, 58: 7–15. Arcos, J. M., and Oro, D. 1996. Changes in foraging range of Audouin's gulls Larus audouinii in relation to a trawler moratorium in the western Mediterranean. Colonial Waterbirds, 19: 128–131. Becker, P. H. 1995. Effects of coloniality on gull predation on common tern (Sterna hirundo) chicks. Colonial Waterbirds, 18: 11–22. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Becker, P. H., and Erdelen, M. 1987. Die Bestandsentwicklung von Brutvögeln der deutschen Nordsseeküste 1950–1979. Journal für Ornithologie, 128: 1–32. Furness, R. W. 1997. The impact of predation by great skuas on other seabird species, with particular reference to Special Protection Areas in Shetland. Report to Scottish Natural Heritage. Shetland. 99 pp. Berghahn, R., and Rösner, H.-U., 1992. A method to quantify feeding of seabirds on discards from the shrimp fishery in the North Sea. Netherlands Journal of Sea Research, 28: 347–350. Furness, R. W., and Hislop, J. R. G. 1981. Diets and feeding ecology of great skuas Catharacta skua during the breeding season in Shetland. Journal of Zoology, London, 195: 1–23. Blaber, S. J. M., Milton, D. A., Smith, G. C., and Farmer, M. J. 1995. Trawl discards in the diets of tropical seabirds of the northern Great Barrier Reef, Australia. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 127: 1–13. Garthe, S., Camphuysen, C. J., and Furness, R. W. 1996. Amounts of discards by commercial fisheries and their significance as food for seabirds in the North Sea. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 136: 1–11. Camphuysen, C. J. 1993. Een verkennend onderzoek: de exploitatie van op zee overboord geworpen vis en snijafval door zeevogels. Het Vogeljaar, 41: 106– 114. Geiss, J. 1994. Die Bedeutung der Helgoländer Fischerei für See- und Küstenvögel. Thesis, Univ. Hamburg. 61 pp. Camphuysen, C. J., Calvo, B., Durinck, J., Ensor, K., Follestad, A., Furness, R. W., Garthe, S., Leaper, G., Skov, H., Tasker, M. L., and Winter, C. J. N. 1995. Consumption of discards by seabirds in the North Sea. Final report EC DG XIV research contract BIOECO/93/10. NIOZ–Report 1995–5, Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, Texel. 202 pp. Castilla, A. M., and Pérez, J. J. 1995. Relationships between fishery activities and presence of the Audouin's gull (Larus audouinii) in the Columbretes Islands. Colonial Waterbirds, 18: 108–112. Dernedde, T. 1993. Vergleichende Untersuchungen zur Nahrungszusammensetzung von silbermöwe (Larus argentatus), sturmmöwe (L. canus) und lachmöwe (L. ridibundus) im Königshafen/Sylt. Corax, 15: 222– 240. Dijk, A. J. van, and Meininger, P. L. 1995. Breeding gulls and terns in The Netherlands in 1992. Sula, 9: 133–150. Fisher, J. 1953. The fulmar. Collins, London. 496 pp. Freyer, T. 1995. Untersuchungen zur Ernährungsökologie und den Aktivitätsmustern der heringsmöwe (Larus fuscus) und der silbermöwe (Larus argentatus). Thesis, University of Kiel. 62 pp. Furness, R. W. 1987. Effects of changes in whitefish netmesh size on scavenging seabird ecology. Nature Conservancy Council Chief Scientist Directorate Report No. 799. 58 pp. Furness, R. W. 1992. Implications of changes in net mesh size, fishing effort and minimum landing size regulations in the North Sea for seabird populations. JNCC report No. 133. Joint Nature Conservation Committee, Aberdeen. 62 pp. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Gorke, M. 1990. Die lachmöwe (Larus ridibundus) in Wattenmeer und Binnenland. Ein verhaltensökologischer Vergleich. Seevögel, 11(3): 1–48. Gubernator, M. 1994. Sozioökonomischer Vergleich der niedersächsischen und schleswig-holsteinischen Fischereiwirtschaft. Informationen für die Fischwirtschaft, 41: 136–141. Hälterlein, B., and Südbeck, P. 1996. Brutvogelbestände an der deutschen Nordseeküste im Jahre 1994 – Achte Erfassung durch die Arbeitsgemeinschaft Seevogelschutz. Seevögel, 17: 5–11. Hamer, K. C., Furness, R. W., and Caldow, R. W. G. 1991. The effects of changes in food availability on the breeding ecology of great skuas Catharacta skua in Shetland. Journal of Zoology, London, 223: 175– 188. Hamer, K. C., Monaghan, P., Uttley, J. D., Walton, P., and Burns, M. D. 1993. The influence of food supply on the breeding ecology of kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla in Shetland. Ibis, 135: 255–263. Hario, M. 1994. Reproductive performance of the nominate lesser black-backed gull under the pressure of herring gull predation. Ornis Fennica, 71: 1–10. Hatch, J. J. 1970. Predation and piracy by gulls at a ternery in Maine. Auk, 87: 244–254. Hartwig, E., Schrey, K., and Schrey, E. 1990. Zur Nahrung der Lachmöwe (Larus ridibundus) im Niederelberaum. Seevögel, 11: 27–31. Heubeck, M., Mellor, R. M., and Harvey, P. V. 1997. Changes in the breeding distribution and numbers of kittiwakes around Unst, Shetland, and the presumed role of predation by great skuas. Seabird, 19: 12–21. 39 Howes, L. A., and Montevecchi, W. A. 1992. Population trends of gulls and terns in Gros Morne National Park, Newfoundland. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 71: 1516–1520. Oro, D., Bosch, M., and Ruiz, X. 1995. Effects of a trawling moratorium on the breeding success of the yellow-legged gull Larus cachinnans. Ibis, 137: 547– 549. Hudson, A. V. 1986. The biology of seabirds utilising fishery waste in Shetland. Ph.D. thesis. University of Glasgow, Glasgow. 285 pp. Oro, D., Jover, L., and Ruiz, X. 1996. Influence of trawling activity on the breeding ecology of a threatened seabird, Audouin's gull Larus audouinii. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 139: 19–29. Hudson, A. V., and Furness, R. W. 1988. Utilization of discarded fish by scavenging seabirds behind whitefish trawlers in Shetland. Journal of Zoology, London, 215: 151–166. Hüppop, O. 1995a. Fischerei bestimmt Großmöwenbestände auf der Insel Helgoland. Jahresbericht des Institut für Vogelforschung, 2: 21. Hüppop, O. 1995b. Brutbestände helgoländer Seevögel. Jahresbericht des Institut für Vogelforschung, 2: 19– 20. ICES 1996. Report of the working group on ecosystems effects of fishing activity. ICES CM 1996/Assess/Env:1. 126 pp. Kruuk, H. 1964. Predators and anti-predator behaviour of the black-headed gull (Larus ridibundus L.). Behaviour Supplement, 11: 1–129. Lozàn, J. L. 1994. Über die ökologische und wirtschaftliche Bedeutung der Nordseegarnele im Wattenmeer mit Bemerkungen über andere Krebsarten. In: Warnsignale aus dem Wattenmeer, pp. 117–122. Ed. by J. L. Lozàn, E. Rachor, K. Reise, H. v. Westerhagen, and W. Lenz. Blackwell Wissenschafts-Verlag, Berlin. Møller, A. P. 1981. Problems with Danish herring gulls Larus argentatus. Proceedings of the Second Nordic Congress of Ornithology, 1979: 127–135. Montevecchi, W. A. 1977. Predation in a salt marsh laughing gull colony. Auk, 94: 583–585. Noordhuis, R., and Spaans, A. L. 1992. Interspecific competition for food between herring Larus argentatus and lesser black-backed gulls L. fuscus in the Dutch Wadden Sea area. Ardea, 80: 115–132. Oro, D. 1995. The influence of commercial fisheries in daily activity of Audouin's gull Larus audouinii in the Ebro Delta, NE Spain. Ornis Fennica, 72: 154– 158. Oro, D. 1996. Effects of trawler discard availability on egg laying and breeding success in the lesser blackbacked gull Larus fuscus in the western Mediterranean. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 132: 43–46. 40 Oro, D., and Martinez-Vilalta, A. 1994. Factors affecting kleptoparasitism and predation rates upon a colony of Audouin's gull (Larus audouinii) by yellow-legged gulls (Larus cachinnans) in Spain. Colonial Waterbirds, 17: 35–41. Prawitt, O., 1995. Untersuchungen zur Bestimmung der Fangkraft und des Fischereiaufwands von Krabbenkuttern. Diplomarbeit Universität Kiel. 82 pp. Regehr, H. M., and Montevecchi, W. A. 1996. Interactive effects of food shortage and predation on breeding failure of black-legged kittiwakes: effects of fisheries activities and implications for indicator species. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 155: 249– 260. Ruiz, X., Oro, D., Martinez-Vilalta, A., and Jover, L. 1996. Feeding ecology of Audouin's gulls Larus audouinii in the Ebro Delta. Colonial Waterbirds, 19: 68–74. Russell, J. O., and Montevecchi, W. A. 1996. Predation on adult puffins Fratercula arctica by great blackbacked gulls Larus marinus at a Newfoundland colony. Ibis, 138: 791–794. Spaans, A. L., Bukaciska, M., Bukaciski, D., and van Swelm, N. D. 1994. The relationship between food supply, reproductive parameters and population dynamics in Dutch lesser black-backed gulls Larus fuscus: a pilot study. IBN Research Rep. 94/9, Institute for Forestry and Nature Research, Wageningen. 65 pp. Stone, C. J., Webb, A., Barton, C., Ratcliffe, N., Reed, T. C., Tasker, M. L., Camphuysen, C. J., and Pienkowski, M. W. 1995. An atlas of seabird distribution in north-west European waters. Joint Nature Conservation Committee, Peterborough. 326 pp. Tasker, M. L., and Furness, R. W. 1996. Estimation of food consumption by seabirds in the North Sea. In: Seabird/fish interactions, with particular reference to seabirds in the North Sea, pp. 6–42. Ed. By G. L. Hunt and R. W. Furness. ICES Cooperative Research Report, 216. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Thiel, M., and Sommer, T. 1994. Wind-dependent impact of gulls (Larus spec.) on the breeding success of common terns (Sterna hirundo). Ophelia Supplement, 6: 239–251. Walter, U. 1997. Quantitative analysis of discards from brown shrimp trawlers in the coastal area of the East Frisian islands. Archives of Fishery and Marine Research, 45: 61–76. Tiews, K. 1983. Über die Veränderungen im Auftreten von Fischen und Krebsen im Beifang der deutschen Garnelenfischerei während der Jahre 1954–1981. Archiv Fischereiwissenschaft, 34: 1–156. Walter, U., and Becker, P. H. 1994. The significance of discards from the brown shrimp fisheries for seabirds in the Wadden Sea – preliminary results. Ophelia Supplement, 6: 253–262. Tiews, K., and Wienbeck, H. 1990. Grundlagenmaterial zu "35–Jahres–Trend (1954–1988) der Häufigkeit von 25 Fisch- und Krebstierbeständen an der Deutschen Nordseeküste". Veröff. Inst. Küsten- und Binnenfischerei. 64 pp. Walter, U., and Becker, P. H. 1996. Die Bedeutung der Fischerei und des Schiffolgens für die Ernährung von Seevögeln im Wattenmeer. Forschungsbericht 108 02 085/21, Ökosystemforschung Niedersächisches Wattenmeer. Umweltbundesamt, Berlin. 322 pp. Tuck, L. M. 1961. The murres. Queen’s Printers, Ottawa. 260 pp. Walter, U. and Becker, P. H. 1997. Occurrence and consumption of seabirds scavenging on shrimper discards in the Wadden Sea. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 54: 684–694. Vauk, G., Prüter, J., and Hartwig, E. 1989. Long-term population dynamics of breeding bird species in the German Wadden Sea area. Helgolander Meeresuntersuchungen, 43: 357–365. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Wanless, S. 1988. The recolonisation of the Isle of May by common and Arctic terns. Scottish Birds, 15: 1–8. 41 5 Exploration of the short- and medium-term consequences of a reduction in the amounts of fish discarded M. L. Tasker1, P. H. Becker2 and G. Chapdelaine3 1 Joint Nature Conservation Committee, 7 Thistle Place, Aberdeen AB10 1UZ, U.K. Institut für Vogelforschung, Vogelwarte Helgoland, An der Vogelwarte 21, D–26386 Wilhelmshaven, Germany. 3 Canadian Wildlife Service, 1141 route de l’Eglise, PO Box 10100, 9th floor, Ste-Foy, Quebec G1V 4H5, Canada. 2 5.1 Short term effects 5.1.1 Introduction There are increasing pressures to further manage fisheries in order to make them sustainable, to reduce waste and to minimise collateral damage to the environment. A reduction in the levels of discarding seems almost inevitable through several possible policies. Two possibilities seem likely to occur in the near future, firstly, a general reduction in fishing effort and hence a general reduction in discards, and secondly an increase in the mesh size used in fishing gears. These measures may have different effects on scavengers (Furness, 1992; ICES, 1994; Hubold, 1994). Seasonal and longer-term fishery-closures are also likely to occur, as at present off Canada and Spain. 5.1.2 Loss of feeding opportunities A general reduction in catch effort will probably lead to more competition for available discards and larger and stronger species would be more likely to benefit at the expense of the smaller, weaker species. In other words, kittiwake Rissa tridactyla, other small gulls, great skuas Catharacta skua and fulmars Fulmarus glacialis (Camphuysen et al., 1995) would suffer, while gannets Morus bassanus would be relatively unaffected. An increase in mesh size does not necessarily increase the size of fish caught as fishermen may take counteracting measures (Reeves et al., 1992). However, if the purpose of this potential measure was to be met, the proportion and amount of small-sized fish present in discards would decrease considerably. Furness (1992) calculated reductions in the mass of discarded whiting Merlangius merlangus at 65%, while haddock Melanogrammus aeglefinus discard would decrease by 52% if the mesh size increased from 90 to 120 mm in North Sea fishing fleets. This increase would principally reduce the small-sized discards (Furness, 1992). This would lead to a deterioration of feeding opportunities for the smaller gulls, such as black-headed gull Larus ridibundus, common gull L. canus and kittiwake which utilise the smallest discarded fish preferentially (Camphuysen et al., 1993, 1995; Garthe and Hüppop, 1994). 42 Both measures could lead to reduced feeding opportunities for immature individuals since adults are generally more successful than immatures of the same species (Wunderle, 1992), particularly if immatures switch to less favourable lengths of discards (Garthe, 1993). Immatures, especially birds in their first year of life, could suffer from higher mortality. 5.1.3 Change in bird distribution All those species utilising fishery waste can be assumed to be somewhat influenced by the distribution of fishing vessels. Tasker et al. (1987) found positive spatial correlations between many species including gulls, great skuas and fulmars and the presence of trawlers. However, there was substantial variability with respect to season and area. Camphuysen et al. (1995) found that great black-backed gulls Larus marinus, herring gulls L. argentatus and lesser black-backed gulls L. fuscus (in summer) were the only species which were clearly positively influenced by the presence of fishing vessels. There was no evidence of large-scale spatial correlations between trawlers and fulmars (Camphuysen et al., 1995; Camphuysen and Garthe, 1997) Based on the above results, it is possible to speculate that the distribution of large gulls would be most affected by a change in fisheries effort whereas that of other species, such as gannet, would be less affected. 5.1.4 Competition at trawlers Discharges of fishery waste from fishing vessels attract scavenging seabirds which compete for preferred items. For several species of seabirds, the preferred size and/or type of the discarded items overlaps and because the numbers of ship-followers are often high, competition for scraps is often intense. In the competition for the food resources provided by fishing boats some seabirds are more successful than others as shown by several studies (e.g., Hudson and Furness, 1989; Camphuysen et al., 1995). Different species employ different strategies for obtaining discards and offal (e.g., Dändliker and Mülhauser, 1988; Hudson and Furness, 1989; Camphuysen, 1993; Walter and Becker, 1994; Camphuysen et al., 1995). Small species, such as kittiwake, have to catch and swallow prey items rapidly to avoid interactions with other, physically stronger ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 species. If these small species do not succeed with this strategy they will often lose their prey to larger, more aggressive, species. high tide, when foraging sites are flooded (Veen, 1977). Growth rates of tern chicks will be reduced, and the breeding success lowered in kleptoparasitised species. Gannets and great black-backed gulls are least vulnerable to kleptoparasitism. For these high-ranking species, kleptoparasitism is an effective strategy for obtaining food. Large such as gannet, great black-backed gull and great skua, are virtually absent during spring and summer in the eastern and southern North Sea. Smaller species such as fulmar and kittiwake do better when robbing others in these regions and seasons. A reduction in total quantities of discards produced and discharged in commercial fisheries will probably lead to a higher frequency of kleptoparasitic interactions. The implication of these size-based dominance hierarchies is that small species, such as kittiwake, other small gulls and fulmar will suffer the most. 5.1.6 Reproduction 5.1.5 Changing diets A reduction in the availability of, and increase in mean size of, discards will lead to a switch in foraging methods and diets in gulls. During the breeding season, herring gulls would change their feeding areas and habits and exploit food of lower energetic quality such as eggs and chicks of its own and other species (Regehr and Montevecchi, 1996). Interactions between Audouin's gull Larus audouinii and yellow-legged gulls L. cachinnans at the colony site increase during periods with no fishing activity (Gonzalez-Solis, 1996). High densities of breeders and low food supply increases cannibalism among gulls (Parsons, 1971, 1976; Spaans et al., 1987; Kilpi, 1989). Investigations of a kittiwake colony on Great Island, Newfoundland revealed complex relationships (Regehr and Montevecchi, 1996). A four-week delay in the inshore arrival of spawning capelin and a lack of fishery waste due to the closure of the ground fishing industry in eastern Newfoundland apparently led to food shortages in herring gulls and great black-backed gulls. These species were forced to switch to other prey, including depredation of the eggs and chicks of kittiwakes. The low availability of capelin Mallotus villosus (also an important food of kittiwakes) and the high predation pressure by herring gulls and great black-backed gulls led to delayed breeding and led to extremely low breeding success. They showed that kittiwake reproductive success was a consequence of indirect and interactive effects of food supplies on both parents and predators. Intra- and interspecific kleptoparasitic feeding may increase at colonies owing to reductions in the availability of discards. In windy conditions blackheaded gulls steal more sandeels Ammodytes spp. from Sandwich terns Sterna sandvicensis than during calm weather when their intertidal foraging is more successful (Gorke, 1990). In addition, kleptoparasitism increases at ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Noordhuis and Spaans (1992) showed that as herring gulls changed diet and obtained fewer discards, there was a decrease in breeding success and numbers. Some examples of the dependence of seabirds on fisheries originate from the Mediterranean. Paterson et al. (1992) describe severely reduced breeding success in two Spanish colonies of Audouin's gulls in 1991 that resulted from a fisheries moratorium (to preserve fish stocks) during the gull's breeding season. Oro (1996) and Oro et al. (1995, 1996) demonstrated that the breeding success of Audouin's, yellow-legged and lesser black-backed gulls differed significantly between years with different trawling activity at the Ebro Delta, north-east Spain. The three species of gulls compensated partly for the cessation in food supply (discards) after a trawl moratorium took place by switching to other types of food. Other parameters of breeding and behaviour were affected by the availability of fishery waste. A long-term large-scale fishery moratorium in eastern Canada has been associated with increased predatory pressure by great black-backed gulls on kittiwakes and Atlantic puffins Fratercula arctica, which has in turn reduced breeding success (Russel and Montevecchi, 1996; Regehr and Montevecchi, 1996). In summary, if food supply is reduced, reproduction can be impaired in several ways. The numbers of nonbreeders can increase, the onset of laying can be delayed, clutch size and egg size can decrease, and hatching success, growth rate, fledging success and recruitment can will be reduced (e.g., Pons, 1992). The weakened condition of adults can lead to higher mortality and lowered reproductive ability. Mortality of adult gulls, which is highest during August after the breeding season (Coulson et al., 1983), may increase due to lowered adult condition caused by the lack of food from fisheries. 5.2 Medium term effects 5.2.1 Introduction All effects listed above as short-term will tend to continue into the medium and long-term if quantities of waste discarded remain at a relatively low level. Several further medium-term effects might be expected. 5.2.2 Population size of consumer species Short-term reductions of reproductive success and survival of the scavenging species owing to a discard reduction will over time result in population decreases if alternative foods are not available. The capacity of the environment enhanced by the anthropogenic food 43 sources at sea will be lowered to more natural levels, and the numbers of seabirds using discards and offal will decline. But as gulls are opportunistic feeders, individuals will respond by changing their scavenging diet to other food sources, especially more terrestrial prey and garbage (Gonzalez-Solis, 1996) and may increase predation pressure on smaller seabird species. Despite this shift, however, competition between individuals could be stronger, so that populations may be reduced anyway. As an example, on the North Shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence the herring gull population decreased from 14,000 pairs in 1988 to 3,000 pairs in 1993 (Figure 5.1), corresponding with a moratorium on cod fishing (Chapdelaine and Rail, 1997). While kittiwakes are considered to be a scavenging species, they could compensate the lack of discard provisioning because depredation by gulls will be less as gull populations decrease (Howes and Montevecchi, 1992). In turn the breeding success of smaller species should improve (Regehr and Montevecchi, 1996). 5.2.3 Population size and species composition During the first years of discard reductions, those species preyed upon by the larger predatory and scavenging species are likely to experience a population decline. This could be through direct predation, or indirectly through reduced reproductive output due to predation of chicks and eggs. However, should the populations of the larger predatory species also decline, there might be some longer term recovery of the smaller species. The competition for nesting sites will be less. In consequence the quality of breeding sites for those species might improve, and areas abandoned will be resettled. Terns, for example, can reoccupy their former breeding sites and populations can recover in the longer term. Overall, in the absence of other influences, population sizes are likely to settle to different equilibria than previously. Furness (1992) estimated a reduction of scavenging seabirds in Scotland by 500,000 individuals if the demersal trawl mesh size were to be increased from 90 to 120 cm or if fishery effort was reduced by 30%. Figure 5.1. Herring gull breeding numbers in sanctuaries on the North Shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence in relation to total landings of cod (assumed to provide an index of the quantities of offal and discards made available to seabirds) on the North Shore Chapdelaine and Rail, 1997) 44 ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 5.3 References Camphuysen, C. J. 1993. Een verkennend onderzoek: De exploitatie van op zee overboord geworpen vis en snijafval door zeevogels. Het Vogeljaar, 41: 106– 114. Camphuysen, C. J., Calvo, B., Durinck, J., Ensor, K., Follestad, A., Furness, R. W., Garthe, S., Leaper, G., Skov, H., Tasker, M. L., and Winter, C. J. N. 1995. Consumption of discards by seabirds in the North Sea. Final report EC DG XIV research contract BIOECO/93/10. NIOZ–Report 1995–5, Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, Texel. 202 pp. Camphuysen, C. J., and Garthe, S. 1997. Distribution and scavenging habits of northern fulmars in the North Sea. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 54: 654–683. Chapdelaine, G., and Rail, J.-F. 1997. History of the herring gull on the north shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence and its relationship with fisheries. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 54: 708–713. Coulson, J. C., Monaghan, P., Butterfield, J., Duncan, N., Thomas, C., and Shedden, C. 1983. Seasonal changes in the herring gull in Britain: weight, moult and mortality. Ardea, 71: 235–244. Howes, L. A., and Montevecchi, W. A. 1992. Population trends of gulls and terns in Gros Morne National Park, Newfoundland. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 71: 1516–1520. Hubold, G. 1994. Maßnahmenkatalog für eine ausgewogenere und rationellere Bewirtschaftung der von der deutschen Fischerei genutzten Fischereiressourcen im EG Meer. Informationen zur Fischwirtschaft, 41: 3–18. Hudson, A. V., and Furness, R. W. 1989. The behaviour of seabirds foraging at fishing boats around Shetland. Ibis, 131: 225–237. ICES 1994. Report of the Working Group on ecosystem effects of fishing activities. ICES, C.M. 1994/Assess/Env:1. 109 pp. Kilpi, M. 1989. The effect of varying pair numbers on reproduction and use of space in a small herring gull Larus argentatus colony. Ornis Scandinavica, 20: 204–210. Noordhuis, R., and Spaans, A. L. 1992. Interspecific competition for food between herring Larus argentatus and lesser black-backed gulls L. fuscus in the Dutch Wadden Sea area. Ardea, 80: 115–132. Dändliker, G., and Mülhauser, G. 1988. L'exploitation des déchets de chalutage par les oiseaux de mer au large des Orcades et des Shetland (Nord-Est Atlantique). Nos Oiseaux, 39: 257–288. Oro, D. 1996. Effects of trawler discard availability on egg laying and breeding success in the lesser blackbacked gull Larus fuscus in the western Mediterranean. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 132: 43–46. Furness, R. W. 1992. Implications of changes in net mesh size, fishing effort and minimum landing size regulations in the North Sea for seabird populations. JNCC report No. 133. Joint Nature Conservation Committee. Aberdeen. 62 pp. Oro, D., Bosch, M., and Ruiz, X. 1995. Effects of a trawling moratorium on the breeding success of the yellow-legged gull Larus cachinnans. Ibis, 137: 547– 549. Garthe, S. 1993. Quantifizierung von Abfall und Beifang der Fischerei in der südöstlichen Nordsee und deren Nutzung durch Seevögel. Hamburger avifauniatische Beitrage, 25: 125–237. Oro, D., Jover, L. and Ruiz, X. 1996. Influence of trawling activity on the breeding ecology of a threatened seabird, Audouin's gull Larus audouinii. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 139: 19–29. Garthe, S., and Hüppop, O. 1994. Distribution of shipfollowing seabirds and their utilization of discards in the North Sea in summer. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 106: 1–9. Parsons, J. 1971. Cannibalism in herring gulls. British Birds, 64: 528–537. Gonzalez-Solis, J. 1996. Interspecific relationships between two species of gulls breeding sympatrically: Larus audouinii and L. cacchinans. Thesis, University of Barcelona. Gorke, M. 1990. Die Lachmöwe (Larus ridibundus) in Wattenmeer und Binnenland. Ein verhaltensökologischer Vergleich. Seevögel, 11, Supplement 3: 1–48. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Parsons, J. 1976. Nesting density and breeding success in the herring gull Larus argentatus. Ibis, 118: 537–546. Paterson, A. M., Martinez Vilalta, A., and Dies, J. I. 1992. Partial breeding failure of Audouin's gull in two Spanish colonies in 1991. British Birds, 85: 97– 100. Pons, J. M. 1992. Effects of changes in the availability of human refuse on breeding parameters in a herring gull Larus argentatus population in Brittany, France. Ardea, 80: 143–150. 45 Reeves, S. A., Armstrong, D.W., Fryer, R.J. and Coull, K.A. 1992. The effect of mesh size, cod-end extension length and cod-end diameter on the selectivity of Scottish trawls and seines. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 49: 279–288. Regehr, H. M., and Montevecchi, W.A. 1996. Interactive effects of food shortage and predation on breeding failure of black-legged kittiwakes: effects of fisheries activities and implications for indicator species. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 155: 249–260. Russell, J. O., and Montevecchi, W.A. 1996. Predation on adult puffins Fratercula arctica by great blackbacked gulls Larus marinus at a Newfoundland colony. Ibis, 138: 791–794. Spaans, A. L., de Wit, A. A. N., and van Vlaardingen, M. A. 1987. Effects of increased population size in herring gulls on breeding success and other parameters. Studies in Avian Biology, 10: 57–65. 46 Tasker, M. L., Webb, A., Hall, A. J., Pienkowski, M. W., and Langslow, D.R. 1987. Seabirds in the North Sea. Nature Conservancy Council, Peterborough. 336 pp. Veen, J. 1977. Functional and causal aspects of nest distribution in colonies of the Sandwich tern (Sterna s. sandvicensis Lath.). Behaviour Supplement, 20: 1– 193. Walter, U., and Becker, P. H. 1994. The significance of discards from the brown shrimp fisheries for seabirds in the Wadden Sea – preliminary results. Ophelia Supplement, 6: 253–262. Wunderle, J. M., Jr. 1992. Age-specific foraging proficiency in birds. Current Ornithology, 9: 273– 324. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 6 Evidence for decadal scale variations in seabird population ecology and links with the North Atlantic Oscillation J. B. Reid1, P. H. Becker2 and R. W. Furness3 1 Joint Nature Conservation Committee, 7 Thistle Place, Aberdeen AB10 1UZ, U.K. Institut für Vogelforschung, Vogelwarte Helgoland, An der Vogelwarte 21, D–26386 Wilhelmshaven, Germany. 3 Institute of Biomedical and Life Sciences, Graham Kerr Building, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, U.K. 2 6.1 Introduction The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) has an influence not only on the physical oceanography of the North Atlantic (Levitus et al., 1994; Hurrell, 1995; see also Web site 1), but also on zooplankton (Fromentin and Planque, 1996) and fish (Friedland et al., 1993). Thus an influence of the NAO on higher trophic levels of the North Atlantic and North Sea may be anticipated. Seabirds characteristically have high adult survival rates and deferred maturity, coupled with low reproductive rates. Thus we may expect some parameters of the ecology of seabird populations to be buffered against such environmental fluctuations. In particular, we can predict that breeding numbers may not respond to the NAO or may show a long time-lag in response, whereas breeding success might correlate with the NAO as a consequence of its influence on preferred prey populations of the seabirds. Studies of seabird populations in the California Current (Ainley et al., 1995) demonstrated that the El NinoSouthern Oscillation (ENSO) caused spectacular changes in food supply to seabirds, leading to correlations between seabird breeding parameters and variation in the Southern Oscillation and/or the Aleutian low pressure system, both of which affect sea-surface temperature and thermocline depth. Some seabird species showed stronger links than others with these physical parameters. Cormorants and gulls showed stronger variations in breeding success than did common guillemots Uria aalge, as might be anticipated given the smaller clutch size and the greater volume of sea used by foraging common guillemots. Montevecchi and Myers (1997) attributed a century-long increase in northern gannet Morus bassanus numbers in Newfoundland with warming surface water conditions and increased availability of mackerel Scomber scombrus. A major dietary change during the 1990s to colder-water conditions in the north-west Atlantic led to a change in prey stocks from warm-water pelagic fish and squid to cold-water fish. In this report we have concentrated our efforts on searching for any evidence that the NAO influences numbers or breeding ecology of seabirds in the north-east Atlantic. Our analysis is constrained by the fact that, while there are data sets for seabird breeding numbers over many decades, data on breeding success or diet at particular sites rarely provide more than a run of 10 years, and most sets start during the 1970s or 1980s. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 6.2 Materials and methods Four data-sets, or extracts therefrom, were used in bivariate correlation analyses to detect possible associations between the NAO and aspects of seabird breeding ecology. The UK Seabird Monitoring Programme (Thompson et al., 1996) monitors seabird populations at several colonies around the coasts of Great Britain and Ireland. In addition to breeding numbers and overall success, various detailed aspects of breeding performance are also measured, mainly at four key sites. Data on breeding numbers and breeding success of several species from a selection of years (between 1986 and 1996) and colonies were used in the analyses. The second data-set on bird populations used includes breeding numbers of various species nesting along the coast of the German Wadden Sea and Helgoland. This is a long term data-set, which, for some species dates from 1950 (Becker and Erdelen, 1987; Südbeck and Hälterlein, 1997; and unpublished data of Becker, Verein Jordsand and Institut für Vogelforschung). The third seabird data-set used in the analyses was numbers of breeding pairs and breeding success of common terns Sterna hirundo between 1981 and 1997 on Minsener Oldeoog, an island in the German Wadden Sea (Becker, 1998). Data on the NAO were slightly amended from Hurrell (1995). The winter (December through March) NAO index was used and is based on the difference of normalised sea level pressures (SLP) between Lisbon, Portugal and Stykkisholmur, Iceland. The SLP anomalies at each station were normalised by division of each seasonal pressure by the long term (1864–1983) standard deviation. 6.3 Results No significant correlations were found between the NAO index and breeding population sizes or breeding success of various species breeding at several UK seabird colonies (Tables 6.1 and 6.2). In addition, correlations between breeding success of kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla for seven or more years between 1986 and 1996 at 49 colonies in Britain and Ireland and the NAO gave 31 negative and 18 positive correlations. 47 Table 6.1. Relationships between seabird breeding numbers at various UK seabird colonies and the NAO Index. Pearson correlation coefficients, r, are presented with associated p values. All correlations are non-significant. Species Sites Dates Guillemot Razorbill Skomer, Isle of May, Skomer, Isle of May Puffin Isle of May r p 1986–96 1986–96 .051 .165 .883 .629 1983–1993 .142 .738 Table 6.2. Relationships between seabird breeding success at various UK seabird colonies and the NAO Index. Pearson correlation coefficients, r, are presented with associated p values. All correlations are non-significant. Species Sites Dates r p Fulmar Fulmar Fair Isle, Shetland Isle of May, SE Scotland 1986–96 1986–96 –.058 .088 .866 .796 Fulmar Fulmar Farne Islands, NE 1986–96 –.258 .445 Troswick Ness, Shetland 1986–96 .351 .290 Gannet Fair Isle, Shetland 1986–96 .415 .204 Gannet Noss, Shetland 1986–96 –.169 .620 Gannet Bempton, NE England 1986–96 (excluding 1985) –.087 .812 Shag Canna, NW Scotland 1986–96 –.239 .480 Shag Fair Isle, Shetland 1986–96 .141 .678 Shag Isle of May, SE Scotland 1986–96 –.262 .437 Kittiwake St. Kilda, NW Scotland 1986–96 (excluding 1995) –.397 .256 Kittiwake Isle of May, SE Scotland 1986–96 (excluding 1987) .076 .834 Guillemot Fair Isle, Shetland 1987–96 –.237 .510 Guillemot Isle of May, SE Scotland 1986–96 .082 .810 Razorbill Isle of May, SE Scotland 1986–96 .369 .265 Table 6.3. Relationships between seabird breeding numbers on the German Wadden Sea coast and the NAO Index. Pearson correlation coefficients, r, are presented with associated p values. An asterisk (*) indicates statistical significance. Species Dates Fulmar most years, 1953–96 .371 .022 * Cormorant 1971–96 .183 .370 Herring gull most years, 1950–93 .456 .004 * Lesser black-backed gull most years, 1950–93 .480 .002 * Common gull most years, 1950–93 .566 .000 * Kittiwake most years, 1953–96 .423 .008 * Black-headed gull most years, 1950–93 .565 .000 * Sandwich tern most years, 1909–96 .264 .015 * Arctic tern various, 1982–96 .316 .317 Common tern various, 1982–96 .485 .156 Arctic/common tern most years, 1950–93 .145 .385 Guillemot most years, 1953–96 .536 .001 * Razorbill most years, 1953–96 .414 .010 * 48 r p ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Table 6.4. Relationships between common tern breeding numbers and success on Minsener Oldeoog, German Wadden Sea, and the NAO Index between 1981 and 1997. Pearson correlation coefficients, r, are presented with associated p values. Both correlations are non-significant. Measure r p No. Breeding pairs .233 .368 Chicks fledged per pair .252 .329 Four were significant at the 5% level, two of these were positive and two were negative correlations. We conclude from this result that there is no reason to believe that the factors that the NAO index represents affects kittiwake breeding success. NAO index is unlikely in the case of the black-headed gull, as unlike the other species considered, the blackheaded gull is not closely linked with fish foods gathered at sea, but feeds mainly on Nereis in the Wadden Sea, and additionally inland (Gorke, 1990). No significant relationship was found between the NAO index and breeding numbers of cormorant, Arctic tern or common tern in the German Wadden Sea as a whole. However, there were significant associations between the NAO and numbers of other breeding seabirds here (Table 6.3). In some cases, the relationship was very strong. If the common cause of recent seabird population increases (the Dutch and German Wadden Sea data indicate that these date from the 1970s) is not the NAO then a more local explanation need be sought. It is likely that the general, sustained increase is due to recovery of these populations following a major pollution incident in the Dutch and German parts of the Wadden Sea in the late 1960s when large amounts of organochlorine pesticides contaminated these waters from the Rhine river (Becker, 1991). The immediate effect of this was widespread mortality of seabirds in the Wadden Sea resulting in depressed population sizes, from which there has been a gradual increase in breeding seabirds. This population recovery has coincided with an increase in strength of the NAO since the 1970s but there remains no evidence of a causal link between the two. No correlation was detected between either breeding numbers or breeding success of common terns on Minsener Oldeoog in the German Wadden Sea and the NAO (Table 6.4). 6.4 Discussion No correlations were found between the breeding success of seabirds and the NAO index during the last decade. As expected, no significant relationships were found between numbers of seabirds breeding around the UK. Significant correlations were detected, however, between breeding numbers of fulmar Fulmarus glacialis, herring gull Larus argentatus, common gull L. canus, lesser black-backed gull L. fuscus, black-headed gull L. ridibundus, kittiwake, Sandwich tern Sterna sandvicensis, razorbill Alca torda and guillemot on the German coast, and the winter NAO index. That so many significant correlations should be found between breeding numbers and the NAO when no relationship was suspected, is puzzling. Such a finding would be expected if high correlations also existed among population sizes of these species. Indeed, such high, positive correlations do prevail among population levels of all these species (all pairwise Pearson correlation coefficients, r>0.75, p<0.001). This indicates that a common factor may account for the observed results. Such a common factor, of course, could be the influence of the NAO on food resources. However, the feeding requirements and general feeding ecology of those species involved is so diverse as to render this unlikely. Furthermore, if the NAO were to contribute to processes underlying seabird population patterns, then seabird life history parameters would lead to the expectation that there would be a time lag in the manifestation of NAO effects. An identical effect of the ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 6.5 References Ainley, D. G., Sydeman, W. J., and Norton, J. 1995. Upper trophic level predators indicate interannual negative and positive anomalies in the California Current food web. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 118: 69–79. Becker, P. H. 1991. Population and contamination studies in coastal birds: The common tern Sterna hirundo. In: Bird population studies: relevance to conservation and management, pp. 433–460. Ed. by C. M. Perrins, J. D. Lebreton and G. J. M. Hirons. Oxford University Press, Oxford. Becker, P. H. 1998. Langzeittrends des Bruterfolgs der Fluβseeschwalbe und seiner Einfluβgröβen im Wattenmeer. Vogelwelt, 119: 223–234. Becker, P. H., and Erdelen, M. 1987. Die Bestandsentwicklung von Brutvögeln der deutschen Nordseeküste 1950–1979. Journal für Ornithologie, 128: 1–32. Friedland, K. D., Redding, D. G., and Kocik, J. F. 1993. Marine survival of North American and European Atlantic salmon: effects of growth and environment. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 50, 481–492. 49 Fromentin, J.-M., and Planque, B. 1996. Calanus and environment in the eastern North Atlantic. II. Influence of the North Atlantic Oscillation on C. finnmarchicus and C. helgolandicus. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 134: 111–118. Montevecchi, W. A., and Myers, R. A. 1997. Centurial and decadal oceanographic influences on changes in northern gannet populations and diets in the northwest Atlantic: implications for climate change. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 54: 608–614. Gorke, M. 1990. Die Lachmöwe (Larus ridibundus) in Wattenmeer und Binnenland. Seevögel, 11, Sonderheft: 1–48. Südbeck, P. and B. Hälterlein. 1997. Brutvogelbestände an der deutschen Nordseeküste im Jahre 1995 – Neunte Erfassung durch die Arbeitsgemeinschaft "Seevogelschutz". Seevögel, 18: 11–19. Hurrell, J. W. 1995. Decadal trends in the North Atlantic Oscillation: regional temperatures and precipitation. Science, 269: 676–679. Levitus, S., Antonov, J.I., and Boyer, T.P. 1994. Interannual variability of temperature at a depth of 125 meters in the North Atlantic ocean. Science, 266: 96–99. 50 Thompson, K. R., Brindley, E., and Heubeck, M. 1997. Seabird numbers and breeding success in Britain and Ireland, 1996. U.K. Nature Conservation No. 21. Peterborough, Joint Nature Conservation Committee. 64 pp. Web site 1: http://www.clivar.ucar.edu/vol2/pdl.html – The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 7 A review of the causes, and consequences at the population level, of mass mortalities of seabirds C. J. Camphuysen1, P. J. Wright2, M. Leopold, O. Hüppop2 and J. B. Reid3 1 Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, PO Box 59, 1790 AB Den Burg, Texel, The Netherlands. Fisheries Research Services, Marine Laboratory, P.O. Box 101 Victoria Road, Aberdeen AB11 9DB, United Kingdom. 3 IBN-DLO, P.O. Box 167, 1790 AD Den Burg, Texel Netherlands. 4 Vogelwarte Helgoland, PO Box 1220, D–27494 Helgoland, Germany. 5 Joint Nature Conservation Committee, 7 Thistle Place, Aberdeen AB10 1UZ, U.K. 2 7.1 Introduction Of the millions of seabirds that die of natural causes each year only a small proportion come ashore. However, public attention and concern is often drawn to the frequent large strandings of dead or moribund birds washed up on beaches. These “wrecks” may reflect mass mortalities of seabirds at sea, but are in fact defined as any much larger than usual concentration of seabird corpses washed ashore over a short period. The definition must be applied relative to the population sizes of the species concerned (perhaps considering only that part of the population within a local area from which the wrecked birds probably originate). ‘Large’ numbers of an uncommon species may qualify as a wreck whereas ‘large’ numbers of a very common species might not. There is rarely any indication from the size of wrecks of the total mortality of birds at sea. Mass mortalities that do not result in wrecks are, by their very nature, difficult to study. The numbers and even species of bird involved may only be ascertained by the subsequent effect on the size of breeding populations. However, wrecks of seabirds are recorded sufficiently frequently to enable some, usually qualitative, consideration of their likely causes, seasonality and possible effects on population levels. This section reviews the major causes of seabird wrecks, their seasonal occurrence and the relative vulnerability of various species to different causal agents. 7.2 Presumed causes Wrecks can be explained by several factors. These include those related to weather (for example storms, calm conditions, severe cold), food, pollution (for example oil spills, chronic oil pollution, chemical polllution), fishing activities (for example bycatch) and parasites. The most frequent causes are those due to storms, oil, severe cold weather, and food. Other, less commonly cited, causes include chemical pollution, toxins, calm weather, diseases and parasites. In many cases wrecks cannot be identified as being due to one single cause. For example, adverse weather conditions may affect foraging behaviour and success and may be indirectly responsible for a wreck of emaciated birds. However, in the following treatment we distinguish between the above categories and food related causes per se. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Storm-related wrecks are those in which mortality has been linked with birds being blown away from favoured feeding areas or being prevented from feeding by wind. Calm weather in summer has been associated with wrecks of fulmars Fulmarus glacialis (Anonymous, 1982; Camphuysen, 1989a), possibly as a result of increased energetic costs associated with flapping flight in these birds which are adapted for gliding in the wind (Furness and Bryant, 1996). Oil-related wrecks may be divided into those related to major oil pollution incidents or to chronic oil pollution. Effects on birds of both types tend to be physical, disabling the birds through plumage saturation and subsequent hypothermia and also physiological through the toxic effects of oil. Major oil incidents are widely reported because the events engender public awareness (major ship-wreck, blowout), from which stranded birds are easily detected. Chronic oil pollution is a constant process, a more severe threat to seabirds because of a mosaic of larger and smaller oil slicks which reduces the quality of the areas where seabirds live, most notably around busy shipping lanes and near larger harbours. Oil-related wrecks are relatively well studied, because the effects of oil pollution on seabirds has attracted attention of the ornithological community since the end of the 19th century (Bourne, 1969; Camphuysen, 1989a). Beached bird surveys are an appropriate method of identifying trends in oil contamination of stranded birds, but not (necessarily) in identifying trends in mortality patterns of seabirds (Heldt, 1969; Joensen, 1972; Kuyken, 1978; Vauk, 1978; Becker and Schuster, 1980; Commecy, 1982; Stowe, 1982; Heubeck, 1987; Vauk et al., 1990, 1991; Camphuysen and van Franeker, 1992; Camphuysen, 1995a; Heubeck, 1995). Food-related wrecks are those where mortality results from starvation due to the birds' not being able to forage successfully, either through low food availability or abundance. Seabird mass strandings (and also large scale fluctuations in wintering distribution of seabirds) may be indicative of changes in prey stock abundance, distribution or availability. In the early 1980s, a major south and eastward shift in the wintering distribution of common guillemots Uria aalge, kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla and razorbills Alca torda occurred in the North Sea. This was consistent with a decline in sprat Sprattus sprattus availability in the northern North Sea (Corten, 1990), sprats being a major prey species of these birds in winter. The change in the pattern of sprat distribution together with poor weather was implicated in a wreck of 51 auks along the east coast of Britain in February 1983 (Blake, 1984), and multiple wrecks in the southern North Sea (Camphuysen, 1981, 1989b, 1990a,b,c,d, 1992, 1995a,b; Camphuysen and Keijl, 1994). The rapid decline in Barent Sea capelin Mallotus villosus during the 1980s provides an even more dramatic example of a starvation induced wreck. Thousands of emaciated common guillemots were washed ashore along the coasts of Finnmark during the winter 1986/87, and breeding populations in the Barents Sea collapsed, coincident with the decline of this important prey (Vader et al., 1987). Fishing has often been alleged to be a contributory factor in wrecks of emaciated birds, due to the common utilisation of many small fish species by seabirds and fisheries. For example, concern was expressed that the sandeel Ammodytes marinus fishery off the east coast of Scotland may have been involved in the large wreck of auks and shags Phalacrocorax aristotelis along the east coast of British in February, 1994. The wreck occurred over a far more extensive region than the area where the fishery operated, but it is typical of wrecks that seabirds affected disperse beyond their normal distribution. There are inadequate data to attribute a cause, beyond starvation, to this particular wreck. Wrecks due to bycatch in fishing nets of various sorts (set nets, gill nets) are locally important (e.g., Robins, 1991). Other, apparently less common, causes of seabird wrecks include mortality due to natural toxins (for example botulism, red tides, paralytic shellfish poisoning). Botulism may hit coastal seabirds that utilize freshwater bodies for drinking or bathing in summer, but as yet there is little evidence that this is a major problems for seabirds except at a local scale (Sutcliffe, 1986). Epizootics, involving e.g., Noctiluca in red-tides have been reported to kill a variety of seabirds (Coulson et al., 1968; Armstrong et al., 1968; Wrånes, 1988). Toxins inducing paralytic shellfish poisoning are known to affect gulls in the USA that take contaminated shellfish (Kvitek, 1991) and there are suggestions that such poisoning might be responsible for recent die-offs of common guillemots in the Baltic (Hario, 1994). Occasionally, other less common factors may cause wrecks. For example, the production of an oily substance by a plankton bloom of Coscinodiscus concinnus in the southern German Bight in spring 1996 resulted in strandings of red-throated divers Gavia stellata, due to plumage contamination (Camphuysen, 1997). 7.3 Frequency and seasonal occurrence of wrecks An initial literature search led to identification of over 100 wrecks, or events, in European waters, and a very incomplete list of events elsewhere in the world. Wrecks were roughly classified as: 52 • pollution related wrecks (e.g., oil, chemicals, netting) • weather related wrecks (e.g., storm, calm or cold weather) • food related wrecks • other types. It needs emphasizing that the effect of severe winters on marine and estuarine birds is not fully addressed here, although it is an important factor behind mass mortality. Several case studies indicated that very large numbers of seabirds can suffer from cold stress and starvation in association with severe winter weather (Crisp, 1964; Schoennagel, 1980; van Gompel, 1987; Meininger et al., 1991; Suter and van Eerden, 1992; Beukema, 1994; Camphuysen et al., 1996). The literature search of this subject was not completed for this review. The very long lists of smaller and larger scale oil-related wrecks which have been published in association with accounts dealing with marine oil pollution are not repeated in Appendix 7.1 (Bourne, 1969; Vermeer and Vermeer, 1974; Stowe and Underwood, 1984; Hooper et al., 1987; Camphuysen, 1989a; Camphuysen and van Franeker, 1992; Camphuysen, 1995b). Large numbers of recently fledged birds occasionally wash up dead near their colonies. These post-fledging incidents appear to be relatively common,, but are not often reported (Jones, 1980). Post-fledging wrecks can only be studied after having set clear criteria from which 'wrecks' (as unusually large numbers of birds which died) may be separated from the background noise. Wrecks, as described earlier, were identified in the first place through stranded birds and influxes of birds in areas where they do not normally occur in large numbers. Some of these birds showed clear symptoms of the cause of the event. However, the mass mortalities as a result from drowning and entanglements in fishing gear are not easily attributed if the cause of death was not found (i.e. the net in which the birds had drowned). In the literature, or more commonly before the stage on which things get written up, there is frequently considerable speculation as to why such birds had died (good condition, non-oiled, no adverse weather, but still dead in large numbers). Although such events were possibly caused by netting incidents, a firm conclusion as to the cause cannot be reached. While we are aware of several areas in which potential 'conflicts' between seabirds and fishermen in terms of unwanted bycatch of birds exist, there is very little factual evidence available, and several wrecks in such areas may have been misinterpreted. Post-mortem analysis might help in confirming drowning as the cause of death. It is important to stress that an analysis of wrecks such as this is inherently biased towards scarce species, and in other words to the relatively rare ‘more interesting’ events. Strandings of common birds are often taken for granted and do not become subject of further study or be ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 published in the ornithological literature. As a result, a thorough literature search will lead to a relatively complete picture of little auk wrecks (Camphuysen and Leopold, 1996; Stenhouse and Montevecchi, 1996), but a very incomplete idea of e.g., post-fledging mortality in herring gulls Larus argentatus. Phalarope strandings will be reported even if only very few individuals were found, whereas common guillemot strandings get noticed only when many hundreds wash ashore over short lengths of coast. A conclusion which might be drawn is that some (causes of) wrecks get more attention than others because the underlying factors are more obvious. In the absence of adequate data relating to the underlying factors of most (reported) mass-strandings of seabirds, this analysis should only be considered as a first attempt to discuss wrecks. It is not possible at present to reach firm conclusions as to which species are more vulnerable than others and as to what type of wrecks most affect seabird populations. A final aspect which needs to be addressed before the frequency of wrecks is discussed is the possible overlap of cause of wrecks, or the accumulating effect of a number of factors which lead to mass mortality. Where we refer to storm-driven or food-related wrecks, starvation of the birds found dead is a key point, while strong winds were more obvious in the first type. It is easy to understand that while wind may have been an important factor in reducing the availability of food for certain species, a wind-driven event may be also foodrelated. It has been suggested that starving birds are also more susceptible to the effects of oil pollution, while netting as a factor behind mass mortality of auks in the Skaggerak region had increased after a displacement of wintering auks due to poor feeding conditions in their more usual wintering areas (Peterz and Oldén, 1987). From our first analysis, oil-related and storm driven wrecks occur very frequently. A preliminary search of the literature revealed 30 events of the former type and 41 of the latter in a list which only took account of major events (Appendix 7.1). On the scale of the north-east Atlantic, both types of wrecks probably occur annually, but many have a local or regional character. Oil-related wrecks include those caused by shipping accidents and blow-outs, but very many more small wrecks occur as a result of chronic oil pollution due to deliberate, operational discharges of oil. Storm-driven events overlap with 17 wrecks that were temporarily labelled as 'food-related', because both types comprise stranded birds that were seriously emaciated and apparently died as a result of starvation (see above). Fewer wrecks appeared to have been related to bycatch of seabirds in fishing nets (7), parasites (3), chemical pollution (2), exceptionally calm weather (2), plankton bloom (1). Wrecks did not occur evenly over the year, and different types of wrecks appeared associated with different seasons (Tables 7.1, 7.2). Obviously, post-fledging wrecks of young birds and wrecks due to cold-stress ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 occurred in one season only, being late summer and winter respectively. Food-related and storm-driven wrecks were basically autumn and winter phenomena. Oil-related wrecks occurred through the year, but incidents due to chronic oil pollution were concentrated in the half year spanning winter (Bourne, 1969; Stowe and Underwood, 1984; Camphuysen, 1989a). An overall conclusion of this first inventory of wrecks is that the types of mass-mortality events which are considered here occur seldom in summer, and most frequently in autumn and winter. Little auk Plautus alle wrecks and influxes, which were studied in considerable detail, occurred rather frequently, but not randomly during the last odd 150 years (Camphuysen and Leopold, 1996). In Europe, over 60 influxes/wrecks were recorded since 1840, but these events appeared to occur in clusters (Runs test, ts = – 2.30, n1 = 62, n2 = 94, P< 0.05). A detailed analysis of the most recent influxes demonstrated that the events were in fact related to major shifts in wintering distribution of little auks. Hence, wrecks may occur if the North Sea is used as a wintering area and not, or not be recorded, when the birds were wintering elsewhere. These wrecks were often wind-related, and stormy weather usually suggested as the cause of the wreck, however several little auk influxes and wrecks took place under calm conditions. 7.4 Vulnerability of seabird species to wrecks Most species of seabird are subject to wrecking (Tables 7.2, 7.3) but some are more vulnerable than others. For example, auks tend to be wrecked more often than Procellariiformes while grebes are rarely wrecked. Of course there is variation in the degree to which different species and groups of species are vulnerable to different types of wreck, their preferred food (fish/plankton) being one component of this variability. Species have different vulnerabilities towards the different causes of wrecks (Table 7.3). Birds spending long time swimming such as divers, grebes, duck and auks are especially vulnerable towards oil pollution (Stowe, 1982; Averbeck et al., 1993; Camphuysen, 1989a, 1995b, 1997, Williams et al., 1994), whereas small species that spend a higher proportion of their time flying may be wrecked as a consequence of severe storms, e.g., storm petrels, fulmar, kittiwake, little auk (Pashby and Cudworth, 1969; Threlfall et al., 1974; Doumeret, 1979, 1980; Nakamura, 1983; Teixeira, 1987; Camphuysen and Leopold, 1996). For species that rely on gliding rather than flapping,, the energy expenditure at sea increases with decreasing wind speed (Furness and Bryant, 1996), hence they may run into energetic bottlenecks during periods of calm weather which may in time end in a wreck. Diving birds are especially vulnerable to entanglement and drowning in fishing gear (Brewka et al., 1978, 1985, 1989; Barrett and Vader, 1984; van Eerden and Bij de Vaate, 1984; Peterz and Oldén, 1987; Kies and Tomek, 1990; Hüppop, 1996). 53 Table 7.1. Frequency distribution of different types of North Atlantic wrecks in different seasons (see Appendix 7.1 for a list of wrecks). Category Type Pollution oil summer Autumn 9 1 5 winter 30 chemicals 2 2 bycatch 7 7 1 1 storm 24 cold calm 1 Other food’adults’ 1 post-fledging 1 parasites 2 unknown Totals 17 41 4 4 1 2 winddrift Food Totals 15 plankton Weather spring 2 1 1 14 17 1 1 2 1 1 13 7 32 3 4 61 113 Table 7.2. Frequency distribution of wrecks in the North Atlantic for different groups and species of birds (see Appendix 7.1 for a list of the wrecks; review papers and non-European wrecks were excluded for this analysis). Species/group spring divers 1 grebes 1 summer Autumn 1 storm petrels 7 shearwaters winter Totals 2 4 2 3 1 8 1 1 2 2 2 3 11 Fulmar 4 Gannet 1 1 2 4 cormorants 1 1 5 7 seaduck 5 1 16 25 3 phalaropes 1 1 smaller skuas 7 7 Great skua Larus gulls 0 2 1 Sabine’s gull 1 1 Kittiwake 2 4 terns 1 1 Common guillemot 4 1 2 Razorbill 1 Puffin 1 Little auk 54 1 1 9 1 7 15 2 5 24 34 2 2 2 17 21 1 8 10 9 11 20 3 4 Brunnich’s guillemot Black guillemot 5 ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 7.5 Consequences to populations Possible consequences of wrecks are hard to detect. Further, the number of birds wrecked is not a good indicator of the true number of birds affected. As has been shown, wrecks often occur outside the breeding season. This means that birds from different populations and colonies may be affected. Consequently, due to the large numbers of most seabird species, severe effects affecting populations or even on single colonies are rare. With regards to oil contamination, there is no evidence that chronic pollution has had a long-term effect on populations, but this lack of apparent effect may be confounded by the effect of long-term increases in seabird numbers in many areas. Major effects of wrecks caused by oil contamination could be detected only after a small proportion of major oil spills and only at the colony level. Examples are only a few big accidents near the breeding season and close to the breeding colonies, such as the wreckages of the Torrey Canyon (Cornwall), Amoco Cadiz (Brittany), Sea Empress (Wales), Braer (Shetland), and Exxon Valdez (Alaska) (Bourne et al., 1967; Bourne, 1970; Jones et al., 1978; Anonymous, 1993; Heubeck et al., 1995; Paine et al., 1996). However, there are cases where effects at a population level have been detected following a wreck. For example, severe and long lasting effects were observed during and following a period of pollution involving chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticides in the Wadden Sea. Sandwich terns Sterna sandvicensis and common eiders Somateria mollissima were the most affected birds although declines in populations of all coastal birds of the Wadden Sea were recorded (Koeman et al., 1968, 1969, 1972; Swennen, 1972). The Sandwich tern colony at Vlieland collapsed from 20,000 pairs to less than 1,000 pairs within a few years. At the main eider colony on the island of Vlieland numbers of breeding females dropped from c. 4000 to 800 pairs (Swennen 1972, Furness and Camphuysen, 1997). Table 7.3. Frequency distribution of different types of wrecks in the North Atlantic for different groups and species of birds (see Appendix 7.1 for a list of the wrecks; review papers and non-European wrecks were excluded for this analysis). Species/group oil storm Food other Totals divers 4 4 grebes 3 3 storm petrels 8 shearwaters 1 8 1 2 Fulmar 4 2 5 11 Gannet 2 1 1 4 cormorants 4 2 1 7 15 2 8 25 seaduck phalaropes 1 smaller skuas 6 1 1 7 Great skua 0 Larus gulls 5 Sabine’s gull 1 1 1 Kittiwake 5 terns 1 Common guillemot 2 17 6 1 1 3 1 1 9 10 15 2 7 35 Brunnich’s guillemot 2 Razorbill 9 1 7 Puffin 5 1 4 10 Little auk 4 12 3 19 Black guillemot 4 ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 2 5 22 4 55 7.6 References Andersen, G. S., Börjesson, H., Isaksen, K., and Camphuysen, C. J. 1996. Little auks Alle alle in southern Scandinavia with emphasis on the 1966 influx. Sula, 10: 251–256. Anker-Nilssen, T., Jones, P. H., and Røstad, O. W. 1988. Age, sex and origins of auks (Alcidae) killed in the Skagerrak oiling incident of January 1981. Seabird, 11: 28–46. Anker-Nilssen, T., and Røstad, O. W. 1983. Oljeskadede sjøfugler, Frierfjorden 1982/1983. Norwegian State Game Research Institute, Trondheim. 8 pp. Anonymous, 1869–1875. Anderson’s university buildings, February 27th 1872, specimens exhibited. Proceedings of the Natural History Society of Glasgow, 2: 181–182. Anonymous, 1912. The little auk visitation of 1911. Scottish Naturalist, April 1912: 77–81. Anonymous, 1979. Informe sobre las aves marinas afectadas por el "Andros Patria", en las coastas Gallegas, del 3 al 21 de Enero de 1979. Brana, 3: 15– 31. Anonymous, 1982. Stranding Noordse Stormvogels, april/mei 1982. Nieuwsbrief NSO, 3: 80. Anonymous, 1985. Het rampseizoen 1982/83, continuing story. Nieuwsbrief NSO, 5: 59. a Anonymous, 1993. The ecological steering group on the oil spill in Shetland: an interim report on survey and monitoring, May 1993. The Scottish Office Environment Department, Edinburgh. Armstrong, I. H., Coulson, J. C., Hawkey, P., and Hudson, M. J. 1968. Further mass seabird deaths from paralytic shellfish poisoning. British Birds, 71: 58–68. Averbeck, C., Korsch, M., Vauk, G., and Wilke, J. 1993. Seevögel als Ölopfer. Umweltforschungsplan des Bundesministerium für Umwelt Naturschutz und Reaktorsicherheit, Wasser Forschungsbericht 10204414. Norddeutsche Naturschutzakademie, Schneverdingen. 58 pp. Bailey, E. P., and Davenport, G. H. 1972. Die-off of common murres on the Alaska Peninsula and Unimak Island. Condor, 74: 215–219. Barrett, R. 1982. Sjøfuglkatastrofen i Varangerfjorden – en forklaring og vurdering. Vår Fuglefauna, 5: 100– 102. 56 Barrett, R. T. 1979. Small oil spill kills 10–20,000 seabirds in north Norway. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 10: 253–255. Barrett, R. T., and Vader, W. 1984. The status and conservation of breeding seabirds in Norway. In: Status and conservation of the World’s seabirds, pp. 323–333. Ed. by J. P. Croxall, P. G. H. Evans and R. W. Schreiber. Technical Publication No. 2, International Council for Bird Preservation, Cambridge. Batchelor, A. L. 1981. The August 1981 seabird (Pachyptila and Halobaena spp.) wreck off Port Elizabeth, South Africa. Cormorant, 9: 105–112. Becker, P. H., and Schuster, A. 1980. Vergleich der Verölung von Vögeln nach Arten, Jahren und räumlicher Verteilung an der deutschen Nordseeküste in den Jahren 1972 und 1974–1980. Berichte der Deütschen Sektion des Internationalen Rats für Vogelschutz (ICBP), 20: 55–62. Beukema, J. J. 1994. Increased mortality in alternative bivalve prey during a period when the tidal flats of the Dutch Wadden Sea were devoid of mussels. Netherlands Journal of Sea Research, 31: 395–406. Bibby, C. J., and Bourne, W. R. P. 1971. More problems for threatened seabirds. Birds, 3: 307–309. Blake, B. F. 1983. A comparative study of the diet of auks killed during an oil incident in the Skagerrak in January 1981. Journal of Zoology, London, 201: 1– 12. Blake, B. F. 1984. Diet and fish stock availability as possible factors in the mass death of auks in the North Sea. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 76: 89–103. Bodenstein, G. 1956. Einflüge der Dreizehnmöwe nach West- und Mitteleuropa im Winter 1954/55. Journal für Ornithologie, 97: 451. Bond, S. I. 1971. Red phalarope mortality in southern California. Californian Birds, 2: 97. Bourne, W. R. P. 1969. Chronological list of ornithological oil pollution incidents. Seabird Bulletin, 7: 3–9. Bourne, W. R. P. 1969. The birdkill in the Irish Sea. Seabird Report, 1: 5–6. Bourne, W. R. P. 1970. Special review – after the 'Torrey Canyon' disaster. Ibis, 112: 120–125. Bourne, W. R. P. 1979. Oilspill in north Norway. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 10: 126. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Bourne, W. R. P. 1981. The wrecks of prions, blue and Kerguelen petrels in the Southern Ocean in AugustSeptember 1981. Sea Swallow, 31: 39–42. Bourne, W. R. P. 1990. High auk mortality in northeast Scotland. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 21: 359. Bourne, W. R. P., Parrack, J. D., and Potts, G. R. 1967. Birds killed in the Torrey Canyon disaster. Nature, 215: 1123–1125. Boyd, H. 1954. The 'wreck' of Leach's petrels in the autumn of 1952. British Birds, 47: 137–163. Brewka, B., Meissner, W., Sikora, A., and Skakuj, M. 1978. Four years of the activity of Waterbird Research Group 'KULING'. Ring, 11: 339–347. Brewka, B., Meissner, W., Sikora, A., and Skakuj, M. 1985. Sprawozdanie z liczenia ptaków wodnych zimujacych na zatoce Gdanskiej 1984/85. Notatki Ornitologie, 26: 235–238. Brewka, B., Meissner, W., Sikora, A., and Skakuj, M. 1989. Sprawozdanie z liczenia ptaków wodnych zimujacych na zatoce Gdanskiej 1986/87. Notatki Ornithologie, 30: 79–81. Brewster, W. 1906. Memoirs Ornithological Club no. IV: 90. of the Nuttall Byrkjeland, S. 1989. Svartedauden i Sogn. Vår Fuglefauna, 12: 223–224. Campbell, L. H., Standring, K. T., and Cadbury C. J. 1978. Firth of Forth oil pollution incident in February 1978. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 9: 335–339. Camphuysen, C. J. 1981. Omvangrijke slachting onder de zeekoeten (Uria aalge) eind 1980. NSO Jaarverslag, 1980: 14–20. Camphuysen, C. J. 1987. Stranding van Noordse stormvogels Fulmarus glacialis en (juveniele) drieteenmeeuwen Rissa tridactyla op de Hollandse kust juli–augustus 1987. Sula, 1: 77–78. Camphuysen, C. J. 1989a. Beached bird surveys in the Netherlands 1915–1988; seabird mortality in the southern North Sea since the early days of oil pollution. Technisch Rapport Vogelbescherming, 1. Werkgroep Noordzee, Amsterdam. 322 pp. Camphuysen, C. J. 1989b. Massale sterfte van zeekoeten Uria aalge voor de Nederlandse kust, winter 1988/89. Sula, 3: 22–25. Camphuysen, C. J. 1989c. Crash van pas uitgevlogen drieteenmeeuwen (Rissa tridactyla) op de Nederlandse kust augustus 1987. Graspieper, 9: 11– 17. Camphuysen, C. J. 1990a. Massastranding van alken Alca torda op de Nederlandse kust, jan–mrt 1990: aantal, leeftijd en oliebesmeuring. Sula, 4: 135–138. Camphuysen, C. J. 1990b. Massastranding van Alk Alca torda en zeekoet Uria aalge op de Nederlandse kust, jan–feb 1990. Sula, 4: 23–25. Camphuysen, C. J. 1990c. Fish stocks, fisheries and seabirds in the North Sea. Technisch Rapport Vogelbescherming, 5. Vogelbescherming Nederland, Zeist. 122 pp. Camphuysen, C. J. 1990d. Dieet, leeftijd en geslacht van de zeekoet Uria aalge in de Nederlandse Noordzee in het voorjaar. Sula, 4: 41–54. Camphuysen, C. J. 1992. Auk wrecks in the southern North Sea, 1981–1991: oil pollution or food shortage? In: 'European seabirds', Glasgow 27–29 March 1992, p. 23. Ed. by M. L. Tasker. Seabird Group, Sandy. Camphuysen, C. J. 1995a. Voedsel van zeekoeten Uria aalge voor de Zeeuwse kust, December 1991. Sula, 9: 164–166. Camphuysen, C. J. 1995b. Olieslachtoffers langs de Nederlandse kust als indicatoren van de vervuiling van de zee met olie. Sula, 9 (special issue): 1–90. Camphuysen, C. J. 1996a. Strandingen van de kleine alk Alle alle in Nederland, 1969–96. Sula, 10: 50–252. Camphuysen, C. J. 1996b. Ecologisch profiel van de eidereend Somateria mollissima. WSV Rapport, Nederlands Instituut voor Onderzoek der Zee, Texel. Camphuysen, C. J. 1997. Olievervuiling en olieslachtoffers langs de Nederlandse kust, 1969–1997: signalen van een schonere zee. Sula 11(Special issue): 41–156. Camphuysen, C. J., and Derks, P. J. T. 1989. Voorkomen en sterfte van de fuut Podiceps cristatus voor en Nederlandse kust, 1974–86. Limosa, 62: 57–62. Camphuysen, C. J., Ens, B. J., Heg, D., Hulscher, J., Meer, J. van der, and Smit, C. J. 1996. Oystercatcher winter mortality in The Netherlands: the effect of severe weather and food supply. Ardea, 84a: 469–469. Camphuysen, C. J., and Franeker, J. A. van 1992. The value of beached bird surveys in monitoring marine oil pollution. Technisch Rapport Vogelbescherming, 10. Vogelbescherming Nederland, Zeist, 191 pp. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 57 Camphuysen, C. J., Hart, S., and Zandstra, H. S. 1988. Zeevogelsterfte na olie-lekkage door de ertscarrier MS Borcea voor de Zeeuwse kust januari 1988. Sula, 2: 1–12. Debout, G. 1982. Moevements exceptionnels de quelques espèces d'oiseaux marins au cours de l'hiver 1980–1981. Cormoran, 24: 227–230. Camphuysen, C. J., and Ijzendoorn, E. J. van 1988. Influx of Pomarine skua in northwestern Europe in autumn 1985. Dutch Birding, 10: 66–70. Doumeret, A. 1979. Les conséquences des tempêtes de décembre 1978 sur les pétrels et autres oiseaux pélagiques en Poitou-Charentes, 1ère partie: les procellaridae. La Trajhasse, 9: 52–63. Camphuysen, C. J., and Keijl, G. O. 1994. Leeftijd, geslacht, conditie en voedsel van zeekoeten Uria aalge betrokken bij de massastranding op de Hollandse kust, november 1990. Sula, 8: 257–267. Doumeret, A. 1980. Les conséquences des tempêtes de décembre 1978 sur les pétrels et autres oiseaux pélagiques en Poitou-Charentes, 2ème partie. La Trajhasse, 11: 53–60. Camphuysen, C. J., and Leopold, M. F. 1996. Invasies van de kleine alk Alle alle: voorkomen en achtergronden. Sula, 10: 169–182. Drenckhahn, D. 1969. Mauser und Vorkommen von Eiderente, Somateria mollissima, Trauerente, Melanitta nigra, und Samtente, Melanitta fusca, während der Ölpest im Herbst 1968 an der Nordseeküste Schleswig-Holsteins. Corax 3(19): 23– 30. Carter, M. 1985. Wreck of common diving petrels in Victoria. Australasian Seabird Group Newsletter, 22: 7–8. Clarke, W. E. 1895. On the recent visitation of the little auk to Scotland. Annals of Scottish Natural History, April 1895: 97–108. Cobb, J. L. S. 1976. Seabird mortality. Bird Study, 23: 299–300. Commecy, X. 1982. Une expérience originale, 13 ans de ramassages d'oiseaux morts sur le littoral picard. L'Avocette, 6: 1–39. Corten, A. 1990. Long-term trends in pelagic fish stocks of the North Sea and adjacent waters and their possible connection to hydrographic changes. Netherlands Journal of Sea Research, 25: 227–235. Coulson, J. C., Potts, G. R., Deans, I. R., and Fraser, S. M. 1968. Exceptional mortality of shags and other seabirds caused by paralytic shellfish poisoning. British Birds, 61: 381–404. Craik, J. C. A. 1992. Exceptional mortality of auks, terns and kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla in west Scotland in July 1985. Sula, 6: 125–138. Durinck, J., Christensen, K. D., Skov, H., and Danielsen, F. 1993. Diet of the common scoter Melanitta nigra and velvet scoter Melanitta fusca wintering in the North Sea. Ornis Fennica, 20: 215–218. Eber, G. 1958. Zum Einflug der Dreizehnmöwe im Spätwinter 1957 nach Westdeutschland. Vogelwelt, 79: 9–15. Eerden, M. R. van, and Bij de Vaate, A. 1984. Natuurwaarden van het IJsselmeergebied. Flevobericht no. 242, Ministerie van Verkeer en Waterstaat, Rijksdienst voor IJsselmeerpolders, Lelystad. 73 pp. Eliot, S. A. 1939. Hurricane aftermath: Connecticut Valley records. Auk, 56: 176–179. Engelen, K. A. M. 1987. Olieslachtoffers in het Waddendistrict, januari–februari 1987. Sula, 1: 38– 43. Evans, W. 1892. Unusual numbers of the fork-tailed petrel (Cymochorea leucorrhoa) on the Scottish coasts. Annals of Scottish Natural History, 1: 74–76. Cramer, W. S. 1932. The red phalarope in New Jersey. Auk, 49: 349. Furness, R. W., and Bryant, D. M. 1996. Effect of wind on field metabolic rates of breeding northern fulmars. Ecology, 77: 1181–1188. Crisp, D. J. 1964. The effects of the severe winter of 1962– 63 on marine life in Britain. Journal of Animal Ecology, 33: 165–210. Furness, R. W., and Camphuysen, C. J. 1997. Seabirds as monitors of the marine environment. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 54: 726–737. Crochett, D. E., and Kearns, M. P. 1975. Northern little blue penguin mortality in Northland. Notornis, 2: 69– 72. Furphy, J. S., Hamilton, F. D., and Merne, O. J. 1971. Seabird deaths in Ireland, autumn 1969. Irish Naturalist, 17: 34–40. Crockett, D. E., and Reed, S. M. 1976. Phenomenal Antarctic fulmar wreck. Notornis, 23: 250–252. 58 ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Furtado, D. and Le Grand, G. 1979. Présence hivernale du mergule nain Plautus alle aux Açores. Alauda, 47: 113–114. Gabrielson, I. N., and Jewett, S. G. 1970. Birds of the Pacific Northwest. Dover, New York. 650 pp. Géroudet, P. 1991. Les mouvements transcontinentaux de jeunes eiders à duvet (Somateria mollissima) en 1988 et leurs suites. Nos Oiseaux, 41: 1–38. Gill, C., Booker, F., and Soper, T. 1967. The wreck of the Torrey Canyon. David and Charles, Newton Abbott. 128 pp. Goethe, F. 1978. Bird mortality in the Wadden Sea caused by oil. Oil pollution affecting birds along he German North Sea. In: Pollution of the Wadden Sea area, pp. 58–59. Ed. by K. Essink and W. J. Wolff. Report No. 8, Wadden Sea Working Group. Balkema, Rotterdam. Gompel, J. van. 1987. Mortaliteit van waadvogels in een overwinteringsgebied aan de Belgische kust tijdens de koudeperiode januari–februari 1985. Wielewaal, 53: 175–186. Greenwood, J. J. D., Donally, R. J., Feare, C. J., Gordon, N. J., and Waterston, G. 1971. A massive wreck of oiled birds: northeast Britain, winter 1970. Scottish Birds, 6: 235–250. Grenquist, P. 1970. Väkäkärsämatojen aiheuttamasta haahkojen kuolleisuudesta. Suomen Riista, 22: 4–34. Haila, Y. 1970. M.T. Palvan Öljyonnettomuus. Suomen Riista, 22: 7–13. Ham, N. F. van der 1989. Influx of long-tailed skuas in the Netherlands in autumn 1988. Sula, 3: 28–133. Ham, N. F. van der, Stegeman, L., and Platteeuw, M. 1991. Influx van kleine alken Alle alle in Nederland in winter 1990/91. Sula, 5: 92–100. Hanssen, O. J. 1982. Impact on the local breeding population of common eider, red-breasted merganser and black guillemot in the Østfold Archipelago after an oil spill 1978 (I). Viltrapport, 21: 51–55. Hario, M., 1994. Common murre Circumpolar Seabird Bulletin, 1: 1–2 in Finland. Harris, M. P., Heubeck, M., and Suddaby, D. 1991. Results of an examination of puffins Fratercula arctica washed ashore in Shetland in winter 1990–91. Seabird, 13: 63–66. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Harris, M. P., and Wanless, S. 1996. Differential responses of guillemot Uria aalge and shag Phalacrocorax aristotelis to a late winter wreck. Bird Study, 43: 220–230. Haverschmidt, F. 1930. Invasie van kleine alken (Alle alle (L.)) en papegaaiduikers (Fratercula arctica (L.)) na de stormen in de tweede helft van december 1929. Ardea, 19: 63–65. Heldt, R. 1969. Tote Vögel im Spülsaum der Nordseeküste von Schleswig-Holstein in den Jahren 1959–1969. Corax, 3(19) Beiheft I: 58–69. Hesse, E. 1912. Nochmals das Erscheinen von Raubmöwen im Binnenland während der Herbstes 1909. Ornithologische Monatberichte, 20: 37–38. Heubeck, M. 1987. The Shetland beached bird survey 1979–1986. Bird Study, 34: 97–106. Heubeck, M. 1991. Puffin wreck update. Seabird Group Newsletter, 59: 2. Heubeck M. 1994. The impact of the Braer oil spill on Shetland's breeding seabirds. Seabird Group Newsletter, 67: 3–5. Heubeck, M. 1995. Shetland beached bird surveys: national and European context. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 103B: 165–179. Heubeck, M., Harvey, P., and Uttley, J. 1995. Dealing with the wildlife casualties of the Braer Oil spill, Shetland, January, 1993. Shetland Oil Terminal Environmental Advisory Group and Aberdeen University Research and Industrial Services Ltd, Aberdeen. 83 pp. Heubeck, M., and Richardson, M. G. 1980. Bird mortality following the Esso Bernicia oil spill Shetland December 1978. Scottish Birds, 11: 97–108. Heubeck, M., and Suddaby, D. 1991. Post-mortem examination of little auks Alle alle, Shetland, December 1990. Seabird, 13: 51–53. Holdgate, M. W. 1971. The sea bird wreck in the Irish Sea, autumn 1969. Natural Environment Research Council Publications Series C. No. 4., 17 pp. Hooper, T. D., Vermeer, K., and Szabo, I. 1987. Oil pollution of birds: An annotated bibliography. Canadian Wildlife Service, Pacific and Yukon Region. Technical Report Series No. 34., 180 pp. Hüppop, O. 1996. Causes and trends of the mortality of guillemots (Uria aalge) ringed on the Isle of Helgoland, German Bight. Die Vogelwarte, 38: 217– 224. 59 Joensen, A. H. 1961. Massedød af mallemuk (Fulmarus glacialis (L.)) og ride (Rissa tridactyla (L.)) i danske farvande 1959. Dansk ornithologisk Forenings Tidsskrift, 55: 212–218. Joensen, A. H. 1972. Oil pollution and seabirds in Denmark 1935–1968. Danish Review of Game Biology, 6: 1–24. Jones, P. H. Beached birds at selected Orkney beaches 1976-8. Scottish Birds, 11: 1–12. Jones, P. H., Barrett, C. F., Mudge, G. P., and Harris, M. P. 1984. Physical condition of auks beached in eastern Britain during the wreck of February 1983. Bird Study, 31: 95–98. Jones, P. H., Howells, G., Rees, E. I. S., and Wilson, J. 1970. The effect of “Hamilton Trader” oil on birds in the Irish Sea in May 1969. British Birds, 63: 97–110. Jones, P. H., Monnat, J. -Y., Cadbury, C. J., and Stowe, T. J. S. 1978. Birds oiled during the Amoco Cadiz incident: an interim report. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 9: 307–310. Jouanin, C. 1952. Une invasion de pétrels culblanc. L’Oiseau, 22: 322–325. Jouanin, C. 1953. Note complémentaire sur les Oceanodroma leucorhoa (Vieillot) échoués en France en autumne 1952. L’Oiseau, 23: 240–242. Jury, M. R. 1991. Anomalous winter weather in 1984 and a seabird irruption along the coast of South Africa. Marine Ornithology, 19: 85–89. Kennedy, P. G., Ruttledge, R. F., and Scroope, C. F. 1954. The birds of Ireland. Oliver and Boyd, London. Kies, B. and Tomek, T. 1990. Bird mortality in fishing nets in the Gulf of Gdansk, Polish Baltic coast. Pelagicus, 5: 23–27. Koeman, J. H., Bothof, T., Vries, R. de, Velzen-Blad, van H., and Vos, J. G. 1972. The impact of persistent pollutants on piscivorous and molluscivorous birds. TNO–nieuws, 12: 561–569. Koeman, J. H., Ten Noever de Brauw, M. C., and Vos, R. H.de. 1969. Chlorinated biphenyls in fish, mussels and birds from the River Rhine and the Netherlands coastal area. Nature, 221: 1126–1128. Koeman, J. H., Veen, J., Brouwer, E., Huisman-de Brouwer, L., and Koolen, J. L. 1968. Residues of chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticides in the North Sea environment. Helgoländer Meeresuntersuchungen, 17: 375–380. 60 Kuyken, E. 1978. Resultaten van 15 jaar stookolieslachtoffertellingen in België. Porzana, 5: 38– 39. Kvitek, R. G. 1991. Sequestered paralytic shellfish poisoning toxins mediate glaucous winged gull predation on bivalve prey. Auk, 108: 381–392. Larsson, E. 1960. Stormfågelfynd från svenska västkusten våren 1959. Fauna och Flora, 55: 57–63. Leopold, M. F., and Camphuysen, C. J. 1992. Olievogels op het Texelse strand, februari 1992. NIOZ–Report 1992–5, Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, Texel, 29 pp. Leopold, M. F., Maas, F. -J., and Hin, H. 1986. Elfsteden winter 1986: slachting onder de wadvogels met name de Toppereend. Skor, 5: 70–78, and 90–96. Lloyd, C., Bogan, J. A., Bourne, W. R. P., Dawson, P., Parslow, J. L. F., and Stewart, A. G. 1974. Seabird mortality in the north Irish Sea and Firth of Clyde early in 1974. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 5: 136–140. Lönnberg, E. 1927. En katastrof fö stormdrivna tretåiga måsar, Rissa tridactyla, i norna Sverige. Fauna och Flora, 1927: 113–117. Louzis, C., Guittet, M., Richard, C., Guillou, J. P., Irgens, K., and Monteil, V. 1984. Un example de désequilibre naturel au sein d’un ecosystème marin: la mortalité de mouettes tridactyles. Bulletin Academie Veterinarie Francaise, 57: 315–323. MacPherson, H. A. 1892. A vertebrate fauna of Lakeland. David Douglas, Edinburgh. 552 pp. Mathiasson, S. 1963. En invasion av stormfåglar Fulmarus glacialis (L.) vid västkusten varen 1962. Arstryck Göteborgs Naturhistoriska Museum, 1963: 15–21. McCartan, L. The ‘wreck’ of kittiwakes in the early part of 1957. British Birds, 50: 496. Mead, C. 1974. Irish Sea storm kill. BTO News, 65: 3. Meek, E. R. 1985. Oil related eider mortality in Scapa Flow, Orkney. Scottish Birds, 13: 225–228. Mehlum, F. 1980. Seabirds and the Bravo blow-out at Ekofisk, North Sea. Acta Ornithologica, 17:119–126. Meininger, P. L., Blomert, A. -M., and Marteijn, E. C. L. 1991. Watervogelsterfte in het Deltagebied, ZW– Nederland, gedurende de drie koude winters van 1985, 1986 en 1987. Limosa, 64: 89–102. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Mudge, G. P., Crooke, C. H., and Aspinall, J. 1992. Nonoiling guillemot mortality incidents in the Moray Firth, 1983–86. Seabird, 14: 48–54. Murphy, R. C., and Vogt, W. 1933. The dovekie influx of 1932. Auk, 50: 325–349. Nakamura, K., Hori, H., and Osaka, Y. 1983. [A mass inland drift of Leach’s storm petrels by a typhoon in the autumn of 1979]. Bulletin of Kanagawa Prefecture Museum of Natural Science, 14: 37–44. Nelson, T. H. 1880. Extraordinary arrival of skuas on the Yorkshire coast. The Zoologist, (1880): 20–21. Nelson, T. H. 1911. Arctic and Pomarine skuas and Sabine’s gulls in Yorkshire. British Birds, 5: 170. Nelson, T. H., Eagle Clarke, W., and Boyes, F. 1907. The birds of Yorkshire. Brown and Sons, London. 843pp. Nevhaev, V. A. 1993. A mass mortality of seabirds on the coast of south Sakhalin. Seabird Group Newsletter, 64: 11. O’Donovan, J. E., and Regan, B. O. 1950. Little auks in west Cork. Irish Naturalists Journal, 10: 43. Oldén, B., Kollberg, B., and Peterz, M. 1986. [Seabird mortality in the gill-net fishing, Southeast Kattegat, South Sweden the winter 1985/86]. Anser, 25: 245– 252. Paine, R. T., Ruesink, J. L., Sun, A., Soulanille, E. L., Wonham, M. J., Harley, C. D. G., Brumbaugh, D. R., and Secord, D. L. 1996. Trouble on oiled waters: lessons from the Exxon Valdez oil spill. Annual Reviews in Ecology and Systematics, 27: 197–235. Parrack, J. D. 1967. The wreck of oiled birds in the north-east early in 1966. Seabird Bulletin, 3: 12–17. Partridge, K. 1993. English Channel oiling incident, January and February 1993. Sebird Group Newsletter, 65: 1-2. Pashby, B. S., and Cudworth, J. 1969. The fulmar ‘wreck’ of 1962. British Birds, 62: 97–109. Pelt, T. I. van, and Piatt, J. F. 1995. A wreck of common murres in the Gulf of Alaska during early 1993, and methods used to estimate total mortality. Pacific Seabirds, 22: 46. Peterz, M., and Oldén, B. 1987. Origin and mortality of guillemots Uria aalge on the Swedish west coast. Seabird, 10: 22–27. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Piatt, J. F. and Lensink, C. J. 1989. Exxon Valdez bird toll. Nature, 342: 865–866. Poulsen, C. M. 1957. [Irruption of little auks (Plotus alle (L.)) in Danish waters in the winter 1955–56]. Dansk ornithologisk Forenings Tidsskrift, 51: 30–32. Proger, T. W., and Paterson, D. R. 1913. Ornithological notes. Transactions of the Cardiff Naturalists Society, 45: 100–104. Rittinghaus, H. 1956. Etwas über die ‘indirekte’ Verbreitung der Ölpest in einem Seevogelschutzgebiet. Ornithologische Mitteilungen, 8: 43–46. Robins, M. 1991. Synthetic gill nets and seabirds. Report to Worldwide Fund for Nature and Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. WWF, Godalming. 68pp. Robinson, H. W. 1909. Leach’s fork-tailed petrels in Cumberland and Lancashire. British Birds, 2: 282. Ryan, P. G., Avery, G., Rose, B., Ross, G. J. B., Sinclair, J. C., and Vernon, C. J. 1988. The southern ocean seabird irruption to South African waters during winter 1984. Cormorant, 17: 41–55. Sage, B. L. 1979. Disaster at Sullom Voe. New Scientist, 82: 183–184. Sage, B. L., and King, B. 1959. The influx of phalaropes in autumn 1957. British Birds, 52: 33–42. Schoennagel, E. 1980. Erst der Kältetod – dann die Ölpest. Ornithologische Mitteilungen, 32: 3–4. Seilkopf, M. 1955. Von den Einflügen der Dreizehenmöwe (Rissa tridactyla) im Winter 1954/55 im europäischen Festlande. Vogelwarte, 18: 34–35. Sergeant, D. E. 1952. Little auks in Britain, 1948–1951. British Birds, 45: 122–131. Snijder, D. E. 1953. A great flight of dovekies (Plautus alle). Auk, 70: 87. Soikkeli, M., and Virtanen, J. 1972. The Palva oil tanker disaster in the Finnish Southwestern Archipelago, II. Effects of oil pollution on the eider (Somateria mollissima) population in the Archipelago of Kökar and Föglö, south-western Finland. Aqua Fennica Special Issue: The Palva oil tanker disaster in the Finnish Southwestern Archipelago: 122–128. Sprunt, A. 1938. The southern dovekie flight of 1936. Auk, 55: 85–88. 61 Stenhouse, I. J., and Montevecchi, W. A. 1996. Winter distribution and wrecks of little auks (dovekies) Alle a. alle in the northwest Atlantic. Sula, 10: 219–228. Underwood, L. A., and Stowe, T. J. 1984. Massive wreck of seabirds in eastern Britain, 1983. Bird Study, 31: 79–88. Stone, W. 1965. Bird studies at Old Cape May, 2. Dover, New York. 456 pp. Vader, W., Barrett, R. T., and Strann, K.–B. 1987. Sjøfuglhekking i Nord-Norge 1987, et svartår. Vår Fuglefauna, 10: 144–147. Stowe, T. J. 1982. Beached bird surveys and surveillance of cliff-breeding seabirds. Nature Conservancy Council Chief Scientists Directorate Report, 366. Nature Conservancy Council, Peterborough. 207 pp. Stowe, T. J., and Underwood, L. A. 1984. Oil spillages affecting seabirds in the United Kingdom, 1966–1983. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 15: 147–152. Sutcliffe, S. J. 1986. Changes in the gull populations of SW Wales. Bird Study, 33: 91–97. Suter, W., and van Eerden, M. R. 1992. Simultaneous mass starvation of wintering diving duck in Switzerland and The Netherlands: a wrong decision in the right strategy? Ardea, 80: 229–242. Swann, B., and Butterfield, D. 1996. The 1996 Moray Firth beach bird surveys. Scottish Bird News, 43: 4–5. Swennen, C. 1972. Clorinated hydrocarbons attacked the eider population in The Netherlands. TNO–nieuws, 12: 556–560. Swennen, C., and Broek, E. van den. 1960. Polymorphus botulus als parasiet bij de eidereenden in de Waddenzee. Ardea, 48: 90–97. Swennen, C, and Smit, T. 1991. Pasteurellosis among breeding eiders Somateria mollissima in The Netherlands. Wildfowl, 42: 94–97. Swennen, C., and Spaans, A. L. 1970. De sterfte van zeevogels door olie in februari 1969 in het Waddengebied. Het Vogeljaar,18: 233–245. Tasker, M. L. 1994. East coast seabird wreck, February 1994. Seabird Group Newsletter, 68: 1. Teixeira, A. M. 1985a. Inspecçoes invernais da avifauna costeira em Portugal 1983–84. Cyanopica, 3:373– 386. Teixeira, A. M. 1985b. The Portuguese beached bird surveys – a progress report. Cyanopica, 3: 479–486. Teixeira, A. M. 1987. The wreck of Leach’s storm petrels on the Portuguese coast in the autumn of 1983. Ringing and Migration, 8: 27–28. Threlfall, W., Eveleigh, E., and Maunder, J. E. 1974. Seabird mortality in a storm. Auk, 91: 846–849. 62 Vauk, G. 1978. Seevögel als Indikatoren für zeitlich und örtlich begrenzte Meeresverschmutzung im Gebiet von Helgoland (Deutsche Bucht). Veröffentlichungen des Instituts Meeresforschung Bremerhaven, 18: 95–100. Vauk, G., Averbeck, C., and Korsch, M. 1991. The effects of oil pollution on seabirds on the German North Sea coast from 1983 to 1990. In: Water pollution: modelling, measuring and prediction, pp. 693–705. Ed. by L. C. Wrobet and C. A. Brebbia. Elsevier, Southampton. Vauk, G., Hartwig, E., Reineking, B., Schrey, E., and Vauk-Hentzelt, E. 1990. Langzeituntersuchung zur Auswirkung der Ölverschmutzung der deutschen Nordseeküste auf Seevögel. Seevögel, 11: 17–20. Vermeer, R., and Vermeer, K. 1974. Oil pollution of birds: an abstracted bibliography. Canadian Wildlife Service, Toxic chemicals section, Ottawa. 68 pp. Vernon, C. J. 1988. Wreck of European storm petrels Hydrobates pelagicus on the East London coast, South Africa. Cormorant, 16: 51–52. Wheeler, D. A. 1990. Factors influencing the large-scale displacement of little auks towards the Northumberland coast, November 1987. Transactions of the Natural History Society of Northumbria, 55: 136–143. Williams, J. M., Tasker, M. L., Carter, I. C., and Webb, A. 1994. A method of assessing seabird vulnerability to surface pollutants. Ibis, 137: 147–152. Witherby, H. F. 1912. The 1912 wreck of the little auk. British Birds, 5: 282–286, 309–311, 337–338. Wrånes, E. 1988. Massedød av ærfugl på Sørlandet vinteren 1981/82 [Mass death of eider ducks Somateria mollissima) in southernmost Norway winter 1981/1982]. Vår Fuglefauna, 11: 71–74. Wynne-Edwards, V. C. 1953. Leach's petrels stranded in Scotland in October–November 1952. Scottish Naturalist, 65: 167–189. Wynne-Edwards, V. C. 1963. Pomatorhine skua. In: The Birds of the British Isles, vol. 12, pp. 33–47. Ed. by D.A. Bannerman. Oliver and Boyd, London. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Zoun, P. E. F. 1991. Onderzoek naar de Oorzaak van de Vogelsterfte langs de Nederlandse kust gedurende december 1988 en januari 1989. CDI–rapport nr. H121519, Lelystad. 55 pp. ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Zoun, P. E. F., Baars, A.J., and Boshuizen, R. S. 1991. A case of seabird mortality in the Netherlands caused by spillage of nonylphenol and vegetable oils, winter 1988/89. Sula, 5: 101–103. 63 APPENDIX 7.1 LIST OF WRECKS Shown are authors, year of publication, type of wreck (e.g., storm, oil incident, severe winter, food shortage), region of occurrence, season and species. Author Year Wreck Region Season Species Europe Andersen Anker-Nilssen et al. Anker-Nilssen and Røstad Anonymous Anonymous Anonymous Anonymous Anonymous Barrett Barrett Bibby and Bourne Blake Bodenstein Bourne Bourne Boyd Brewka et al. Byrkjeland Campbell et al. Camphuysen Camphuysen Camphuysen Camphuysen Camphuysen Camphuysen Camphuysen Camphuysen Camphuysen et al. Camphuysen and Derks Camphuysen and IJzendoorn Camphuysen and Keijl Camphuysen and Leopold Clarke Cobb Craik Debout Doumeret Dreckhahn Durinck et al. Eber Engelen Evans Furphy et al. Furtado and LeGrant Géroudet Gill et al. 1996 1988 1983 1869–75 1982 1912 1979 1985 1979 1982 1971 1983 1956 1979 1990 1954 1978 1989 1978 1989b 1990b 1996a 1987 1989c 1990b 1995a 1996b 1988 1989 1988 1994 1996 1895 1976 1992 1982 79 / 80 1969 1993 1958 1987 1892 1971 1979 1991 1967 storm oil oil storm? calm storm oil food oil oil bycatch oil storm oil food storm bycatch oil oil food oil food calm postfiled food oil food oil cold food oil storm storm bycatch food storm storm oil bycatch storm oil storm ? storm food oil Scandinavia Skagerrak Norway UK–Clyde Netherlands UK Atlantic Spain Netherlands Norway Norway–north UK? Skaggerak German Bight Norway UK–northeast Europe Poland Norway UK–east Netherlands Netherlands Netherlands Netherlands North Sea Netherlands Netherlands Netherlands Netherlands Netherlands Europe Netherlands Europe UK–northeast UK? UK–west France–west France–west German Bight Denmark German Bight Wadden UK–north Irish Sea Azores Europe UK–southwest autumn winter autumn winter spring autumn winter winter Auks Auks guillemot auks fulmars auks 64 winter winter winter winter winter autumn winter winter winter spring autumn summer summer winter autumn winter winter winter autumn autumn aut/winter winter summer winter autumn autumn winter winter winter autumn autumn winter auks auks auks auks auks kittiwake seaduck, auks auks storm petrels seaduck, auks auks grebes auks auks auks fulmars kittiwake auks auks seaduck grebes, auks grebes skuas auks auks auks divers, auks mixture mixture Mixture Seaduck Seaduck Gulls Seaduck storm petrels Auks Auks Seaduck Mixture ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Author Year Wreck Region Goethe Greenwood et al. Grenquist Haila Ham Ham et al. Hanssen Harris et al. Harris and Wanless Haverschmidt Hesse Heubeck Heubeck Heubeck and Richardson Heubeck and Suddaby Holdgate Joensen Jones et al. Jones et al. Jones et al. Jouanin Kennedy et al. Kies and Tomek Larsson Leopold et al. Leopold and Camphuysen Lloyd et al. Lönnberg Louzis et al. MacPherson Mathiasson McCartan Mead Meek Mehlum Meininger et al. Mudge et al. Nelson Nelson Oldén et al. O’Donovan and Regan Parrack Partridge Pashby and Cudworth Poulsen Proger and Paterson Rittinghaus Robinson Sage Sage and King Seilkopf Sergeant Soikkeli and Virtanen 1978 1971 1970 1970 1989 1991 1982 1991 1996 1930 1912 1991 1994 1980 1991 1971 1961 1970 1978 1984 1953 1954 1990 1960 1986 1992 1974 1927 1984 1892 1963 1957 1974 1985 1980 1991 1992 1880 1911 1986 1950 1967 1993 1969 1957 1913 1956 1909 1979 1959 1955 1952 1972 oil oil parasite oil storm storm oil food food storm storm food oil oil food food ? oil oil food ? storm bycatch ? cold oil food storm storm storm ? storm storm oil oil cold food storm storm bycatch storm oil oil storm storm storm oil storm oil storm? storm storm oil Wadden Sea UK–northeast Finland Finland Netherlands Netherlands Baltic Shetland UK–east Netherlands German Bight Shetland Shetland Shetland Shetland Irish Sea Denmark Irish Sea Channel UK–east France Ireland Poland Sweden Netherlands Netherlands Irish Sea Sweden Channel UK Sweden UK Irish Sea Orkney North Sea Netherlands UK–northeast UK UK–east Sweden Ireland–west UK–northeast Channel North Sea Denmark UK–west German Bight Irish Sea Shetland UK German Bight UK Finland ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232 Season winter winter autumn winter winter winter winter autumn winter winter winter winter spring spring spring autumn autumn winter spring winter winter winter winter autumn spring winter winter all autumn autumn winter autumn winter winter winter aut/win winter spring autumn autumn winter aut/winter Species Mixture Auks Seaduck Seaduck Skuas Auks Seaduck Auks Cormorant, auks Auks Skuas Auks Mixture Mixture Auks Auks Fulmars Auks Mixture Auks storm petrels Skuas grebe, duck, auks Fulmar Seaduck fulmar, gannet, auks Mixture Kittiwake kittiwake storm petrels fulmar kittiwake seaduck fulmar, gulls, auks grebes, seaduck skuas skuas, Sabine’s gull auks auks auks auks fulmar auks auks seaduck, terns storm petrels seaduck storm petrels gulls auks seaduck 65 Author Year Wreck Region Season Species Swann and Butterfield Swennen and Smit Swennen and Spaans Swennen and van den Broek Tasker Teixeira Teixeira Teixeira Underwood and Stowe Wheeler Witherby Wrånes Wynne-Edwards Wynne-Edwards 1996 1991 1970 1960 1994 1985a 1985b 1987 1984 1990 1912 1988 1953 1963 food? parasite oil parasite wind storm bycatch storm food storm storm cold? storm storm UK–northeast Netherlands German Bight Netherlands UK–east Portugal Portugal Portugal UK–east North Sea UK–east Norway UK–north UK–east winter summer winter summer winter winter winter autumn winter autumn autumn winter autumn autumn auks seaduck seaduck, auks seaduck mixture storm petrels auks storm petrels auks auks auks seaduck storm petrels skuas Zoun Zoun et al. 1991 1991 chemical chemical Netherlands Netherlands winter winter gannets, auks seaduck, auks Brewster Cramer Eliot Murphy and Vogt Snijder Sprunt Stenhouse and Montevecchi Stone Stone 1906 1932 1939 1933 1953 1938 1996 1965 1965 storm storm? storm storm storm storm storm storm storm autumn auks phalaropes storm petrels auks auks auks auks auks phalaropes Other regions: Bailey and Davenport Batchelor Bond Bourne Carter Crochett and Kearns Crochett and Reed Gabrielson and Jewett Jury Nakamura et al. Nevhaev Pelt and Piatt Piatt and Lensink Ryan et al. Vernon 1972 1981 1971 1981 1985 1975 1976 1970 1991 1983 1993 1995 1989 1989 1988 food ? storm storm? ? food? storm storm? storm storm ? food? oil storm ? Western North Atlantic 66 winter winter autumn aut/winter winter autumn Alaska South Africa NW Pacific S Pacific Australia New Zealand New Zealand NW Pacific South Africa Japan Sakhalin Alaska Alaska South Africa South Africa winter spring spring inc winter autumn summer winter winter winter winter auks petrels phalaropes petrels diving petrels penguins fulmars phalaropes storm petrels fulmars, auks auks mixture petrels storm petrels ICES Coop. Res. Rep. No. 232