To the Antarctic or Brazil for new feathers
Thin-billed Prions select their moulting grounds individually
15 March 2010
Not only land birds, but also some seabirds, cover enormous distances during
migration: the sooty shearwater, for example, circumnavigates the earth one
and a half times on its travels. Despite this, relatively little is known about
the migratory behaviour of seabirds as compared with that of their land-living
counterparts. Scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology have
studied the migratory behaviour of thin-billed prions and discovered that the
animals spend their moulting season in two areas that are at a considerable
distance from each other. Thus, it would appear that some seabirds can be extremely
flexible and change their habitat if required - a vital adaptation to the unpredictable
conditions found on the high seas. (Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, first
published online on March 9, 2010).
Fig. 1: Thin-billed Prion
Image: Petra Quillfeldt
While it has been possible to trace the migratory behaviour of some of the biggest
marine birds, in particular the albatross, using satellite transmitters for
more than 20 years now, this has not yet been possible for smaller species.
Methods used on land, such as ringing and radio telemetry, offer little prospect
of success on the open seas. A team of researchers working with Petra Quillfeldt
from the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Radolfzell managed to overcome
these difficulties, however, and succeeded in decoding information about the
migratory behaviour of thin-billed prions. This approximately black-bird-sized
species of the tubenose family, which also includes the albatrosses, fulmarine
petrels and storm petrels, breeds from November to February on the Falkland
Islands and neighbouring island groups in the South Atlantic. The Max Planck
scientists had already demonstrated in an earlier study that at least some of
the birds fly to an area south of the Antarctic Convergence zone to moult and
renew their feathers. Thin-billed prions were also observed at the same time
off the South American shelf and the Brazilian coast.
According to the researchers, 90 percent of the thin-billed prions visit the
Antarctic waters. Most of them remain there for the entire moulting period from
April to the end of June. Individual birds moult, however, further north, offshore
of South America. Despite having these different destinations, the two populations
are not genetically separate groups. The scientists succeeded in ringing individual
prions during their breeding sojourns and then traced them over a period of
several years. The ringed birds tended to show a preference for the area to
which they had flown the previous year; however, there were individuals among
them that moulted in the other area. Furthermore, one of the study birds started
moult in the Antarctic, but later moved further north. "The results show that
not only the entire species but also individual thin-billed prions are extremely
flexible in their behaviour. This enables them to survive the winter in vast
ocean areas with often unpredictable weather conditions and oceanographic cycles
in order to renew their plumage and build up fat reserves for the following
breeding season," explains Petra Quillfeldt.

Fig. 2: The locations of the moulting areas of the thin-billed prions are not
known yet precisely. Up to now it is also unclear whether the antarctic moulting
region is in the atlantic or pacific ocean.
Image: Max-Planck-Institut für Ornithologie
Feathers as a travel archive
The results of the study were obtained with the help of the analysis of carbon
and nitrogen atoms of varying weights found in the birds’ feathers. The researchers
removed one small feather from breeding birds on the Falkland Islands in the
South West Atlantic. They also collected the wings of thin-billed prions that
had fallen prey to skuas. Small samples of these feathers were then tested for
their stable carbon and nitrogen isotope content at the Leibniz Institute for
Zoo and Wildlife Research in Berlin; a highly sensitive mass spectrometer was
used for this purpose. The heavy carbon isotope
13C is not evenly distributed
in the ocean. Its frequency in algae, which form the basis of the oceanic food
web, declines with sinking sea temperatures. Therefore, birds in the Antarctic
Ocean food web have lower
13C values than those who feed in more moderate seas.
New feathers are formed during the moulting period and contain varying volumes
of
13C, depending on the area in which moulting takes place. As a result, the
new feathers store information about the area in which the bird moulted in the
form of a characteristic isotope pattern.
***
Original work:
Quillfeldt, P., Voigt, C. C. & Masello, J.F.
Plasticity versus repeatability in seabird migratory behaviour.
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, March 9th, 2010,
online first, DOI 10.1007/s00265-010-0931-2
Link to the full
article:
http://www.mpg.de/english/illustrationsDocumentation/
documentation/pressReleases/2010/pressRelease20100315/index.html
Contact:
Dr. Petra Quillfeldt, Ornithological Station Radolfszell
Max
Planck Institute for Ornithology, Radolfszell
Tel.: +49 (0) 7732 1501-14
E-mail: quillfeldt@orn.mpg.de
Leonore Apitz, Press and Public Relations, Ornithological Station
Radolfszell
Max
Planck Institute for Ornithology, Radolfszell
Tel.: +49 (0)7732 1501-74
E-mail: apitz@orn.mpg.de
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