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Presentation
Assessment of Trophic Positions for the Seabirds of South Florida using 13C and 15N Stable Iotopes
Marine & Environmental Sciences Faculty Proceedings, Presentations, Speeches, Lectures
  • Michael Young, Nova Southeastern University
  • Amy Hirons, Nova Southeastern University
  • Zara Martinez, Nova Southeastern University
  • David Kerstetter, Nova Southeastern University
Event Name/Location
101st Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America, August 7-12, 2016
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
8-11-2016
Abstract

Background/Question/Methods

Seabirds outside the Northeast Pacific and Northeast Atlantic regions are poorly understood from a trophic perspective. To elucidate trophic level relationships, we examined the concentration of ∂13C and ∂15N in the blood, breast muscle, and feathers (proximal and distal sections) of nine species of adult marine-associated birds commonly found in South Florida: osprey Pandion haliaetus (n=1), black skimmer Rynchops niger (n=1), brown pelican Pelecanus occidentalis (n=36), northern gannet Morus bassanus (n=19), double-crested cormorant Phalacrocorax auritus (n=22), royal tern Thalasseus maximus (n=7), herring gull Larus argentatus (n=5), laughing gull Leucophaeus atricilla (n=11), and ring-billed gull Larus delawarensis (n=3). We collected specimens from four wildlife rehabilitation centers after death due to trauma or illness; specimens were frozen at the respective centers and dissected in the laboratory. Three centers (Broward and Dade counties) were in mainland-coastal areas, while one (Monroe county; Florida Keys) was in a coastal-island environment. Tissues were compared between species and tissue types to determine patterns of ∂13C and ∂15N enrichment.

Results/Conclusions

Calculated mean trophic levels (TLs) of all study species ranged from 5.15 (osprey and northern gannet) to 3.64 (ring-billed gull), findings consistent with existing diet information, and all species exhibited expected ∂13C:∂15N ratios. Broadly varying, but consistent, relationships were seen between tissues, with blood:feather comparisons showing the largest differences. Herring and laughing gulls (TL 4.59 and 3.90, respectively) appear to have a straight trophic enrichment based on coastal POM, although perhaps influenced by occasional anthropogenic waste. Northern gannets (TL 5.15) are likely consuming a limited diet in offshore areas consistent with POM-based enrichment patterns and feeding strategies. Brown pelicans, osprey, and royal terns (TLs 4.78, 5.15, and 4.11, respectively) overlap diets when in the South Florida region, likely reflecting feeding areas; consistent with field observations, when onshore winds are strong, these species feed inshore on carbon-enriched prey, but when winds are weak, they feed near/offshore on carbon-depleted prey, such as lipid-rich fishes. However, cormorants (TLs 3.40 to 5.59) appear to have an unusally bifurcated ∂13C and ∂15N signal between specimens, apparently representing the two habitats inhabited by individual birds in South Florida: one along the coastal/nearshore ecotone (Monroe county) and one along the inland/coastal ecotone (Dade and Broward counties).

ORCID ID
0000-0002-4440-8767
ResearcherID
I-5396-2012
Citation Information
Michael Young, Amy Hirons, Zara Martinez and David Kerstetter. "Assessment of Trophic Positions for the Seabirds of South Florida using 13C and 15N Stable Iotopes" (2016)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/david-kerstetter/129/