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  • 1
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Royal Society of London
    In:  Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series B : Biological Sciences, 267 . pp. 1717-1722.
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: Northern gannets (Sula bassana) are considered to obtain prey usually by rapid, vertical, shallow plunge dives. In order to test this contention and investigate underwater foraging behaviour, we attached two types of data–logging systems to 11 parental northern gannets at Funk Island in the North–West Atlantic. We documented, for the first time to the authors' knowledge, gannets performing long, flat–bottomed, Ushaped dives that involved underwater wing propulsion as well as rapid, shallow, V–shaped dives. The median and maximum dive depths and durations were 4.6 and 22.0m and 8 and 38s, respectively. Short, shallow dives were usually V–shaped and dives deeper than 8m and longer than 10s were usually Ushaped, including a period at constant depth (varying between 4 and 28s with median 8s). Diving occurred throughout the daylight period and deepest dives were performed during late morning. On the basis of motion sensors in the loggers and food collections from telemetered birds, we concluded that extended, deep dives were directed at deep schools of capelin, a small pelagic fish, and we hypothesized that V–shaped dives were aimed at larger, pelagic fishes and squids. Furthermore, these V–shaped dives allowed the birds to surprise their pelagic prey and this may be critical because the maximum swimming speeds of the prey species may exceed the maximum dive speeds of the birds.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science (57). pp. 531-547.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Birds are the most conspicuous, wide-ranging, and easily studied organisms in the marine environment. They can be both predators and scavengers, and they can be harmed by and can benefit from fishing activities. The effects of fishing on birds may be direct or indirect. Most direct effects involve killing by fishing gear, although on a lesser scale some fishing activities also disturb birds. Net fisheries and hook fisheries have both had serious negative effects at the population level. Currently, a major negative impact comes from the by-catch of albatrosses and petrels in long-lines in the North Pacific and in the Southern Ocean. High seas drift nets have had, prior to the banning of their use, a considerable impact on seabirds in the northern Pacific, as have gillnets in south-west Greenland, eastern Canada, and elsewhere. Indirect effects mostly work through the alteration in food supplies. Many activities increase the food supply by providing large quantities of discarded fish and wastes, particularly those from large, demersal species that are inaccessible to seabirds, from fishing vessels to scavengers. Also, fishing has changed the structure of marine communities. Fishing activities have led to depletion of some fish species fed upon by seabirds, but may also lead to an increase in small fish prey by reducing numbers of larger fish that may compete with birds. Both direct and indirect effects are likely to have operated at the global population level on some species. Proving the scale of fisheries effects can be difficult because of confounding and interacting combinations with other anthropogenic effects (pollution, hunting, disturbance) and oceanographic factors. Effects of aquaculture have not been included in the review
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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