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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Seabirds as monitors of the marine environment

Robert W. Furness, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1997 - 
- Vol. 54, Iss: 4, pp 726-737
TLDR
In this paper, the authors used stable isotopes of N and C from the same feathers used for mercury measurement, a technique that also permits the monitoring of trophic status over time or between regions.
Abstract
Many studies have shown that seabirds are sensitive to changes in food supply, and therefore have potential as monitors of fish stocks. For most seabird species breeding parameters suitable for biomonitoring have yet to be measured over a wide range of prey densities. However, it is clear that responses vary among species and care must be taken when interpreting seabird data as a proxy for fish abundance. For many years seabirds have also been used as monitors of pollution, especially oil pollution. Beached bird surveys provide important evidence of geographical and temporal patterns, and, for example, show consistent declines in oil release into the southern North Sea over the last 15 years. Analysis of oil on birds can now permit fingerprinting of sources, allowing prosecution of polluters. As predators high in marine food webs, seabirds also have potential as monitors of pollutants that accumulate at trophic levels. Recent work on mercury in seabirds has permitted an analysis of spatial patterns and of the rates of increase in mercury contamination of ecosystems over the last 150 years, since mercury concentrations in feathers of museum specimens can be used to assess contamination in the birds when they were alive. Surprisingly, pelagic seabirds show higher increases than most coastal ones, and increases have been greatest in seabirds feeding on mesopelagic prey. This seems to relate to patterns of methylation of mercury in low-oxygen, deeper water. Accurate measurement of long-term trends in mercury contamination depend on the assumption that seabird diet composition has not changed. This can be assessed by analysis of stable isotopes of N and C from the same feathers used for mercury measurement, a technique that also permits the monitoring of trophic status over time or between regions. While high mercury contamination of seabirds in the southern North Sea is unsurprising, we cannot yet explain certain unexpected results, such as high levels in seabirds from north Iceland compared with those from south Iceland or Scotland.

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The effects of fishing on marine ecosystems

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of fishing on benthic fauna, habitat, diversity, community structure and trophic interactions in tropical, temperate and polar marine environments and consider whether it is possible to predict or manage fishing-induced changes in marine ecosystems.
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Stable isotopes of carbon and nitrogen in the study of avian and mammalian trophic ecology

TL;DR: Differences in stable-isotope composition among trophic groups were detected despite variation attributable to geographic location, climate, and analytical techniques, indicating that these effects are large and pervasive.
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Ecosystem Services Provided by Birds

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Effects of Environmental Methylmercury on the Health of Wild Birds, Mammals, and Fish

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of methylmercury exposure on wild piscivorous fish, birds, and mammals were investigated. But, the authors focused on the common loon, and only limited field-based studies corroborated laboratory-based results.
References
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Book

The evolution of life histories : theory and analysis

Derek A. Roff
TL;DR: This chapter discusses life history variations, the age schedules of birth and death, the cost of reproduction, and the size of clutch and offspring size.
Journal ArticleDOI

Using stable isotopes to determine seabird trophic relationships

TL;DR: Stable isotopes of nitrogen and carbon analyses suggest that lower trophic-level organisms are more important to several seabirds than was recognized previously and may be a good indicator of inshore versus offshore feeding preference.
Journal ArticleDOI

State-dependent life histories

TL;DR: Life-history theory is concerned with strategic decisions over an organism's lifetime that depend on the organism's physiological state and other components such as external circumstances and recent theoretical advances allow these effects to be modeled within the same framework.
BookDOI

Birds as monitors of environmental change

TL;DR: In this paper, birds are used as indicators of change in water quality and change in marine prey stocks in the tropics of the world, and as monitors of radionuclide contamination.