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Author Grémillet David, Fort Jérôme, Amélineau Françoise, Zakharova Elena, Le Bot Tangi, Sala Enric, Gavrilo Maria, doi  openurl
  Title Arctic warming: nonlinear impacts of sea-ice and glacier melt on seabird foraging. Type Journal Article
  Year (down) 2015 Publication Global change biology Abbreviated Journal Glob Chang Biol  
  Volume 21 Issue 3 Pages 1116-23  
  Keywords Animals, Arctic Regions, Charadriiformes, Charadriiformes: anatomy & histology, Charadriiformes: growth & development, Charadriiformes: physiology, Climate Change, Feeding Behavior, Ice Cover, Models, Biological, Nonlinear Dynamics, Remote Sensing Technology, Russia,  
  Abstract Arctic climate change has profound impacts on the cryosphere, notably via shrinking sea-ice cover and retreating glaciers, and it is essential to evaluate and forecast the ecological consequences of such changes. We studied zooplankton-feeding little auks (Alle alle), a key sentinel species of the Arctic, at their northernmost breeding site in Franz-Josef Land (80°N), Russian Arctic. We tested the hypothesis that little auks still benefit from pristine arctic environmental conditions in this remote area. To this end, we analysed remote sensing data on sea-ice and coastal glacier dynamics collected in our study area across 1979-2013. Further, we recorded little auk foraging behaviour using miniature electronic tags attached to the birds in the summer of 2013, and compared it with similar data collected at three localities across the Atlantic Arctic. We also compared current and historical data on Franz-Josef Land little auk diet, morphometrics and chick growth curves. Our analyses reveal that summer sea-ice retreated markedly during the last decade, leaving the Franz-Josef Land archipelago virtually sea-ice free each summer since 2005. This had a profound impact on little auk foraging, which lost their sea-ice-associated prey. Concomitantly, large coastal glaciers retreated rapidly, releasing large volumes of melt water. Zooplankton is stunned by cold and osmotic shock at the boundary between glacier melt and coastal waters, creating new foraging hotspots for little auks. Birds therefore switched from foraging at distant ice-edge localities, to highly profitable feeding at glacier melt-water fronts within <5 km of their breeding site. Through this behavioural plasticity, little auks maintained their chick growth rates, but showed a 4% decrease in adult body mass. Our study demonstrates that arctic cryosphere changes may have antagonistic ecological consequences on coastal trophic flow. Such nonlinear responses complicate modelling exercises of current and future polar ecosystem dynamics.
 
  Programme 388  
  Campaign  
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  Corporate Author Thesis  
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  Language Summary Language Original Title  
  Series Editor Series Title Abbreviated Series Title  
  Series Volume Series Issue Edition  
  ISSN 1354-1013 ISBN Medium  
  Area Expedition Conference  
  Notes Approved yes  
  Call Number Serial 6216  
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