Abstract
1. A novel capture-mark-recapture (CMR) method was used to build a multistate model of recruitment by young birds to a breeding population of common guillemots Uria aalge on the Isle of May, Scotland. Recruitment of a total of 2757 individually marked guillemots over 17 years was modelled as a process where individuals had to move from an unobservable state at sea, through a nonbreeding state present in the colony, to the breeding state. The probabilities of individuals returning to the colony in a given year, at age 2 and 3-4 years, were positively correlated with an environmental covariate, the winter North Atlantic Oscillation index (WNAO) in the previous years. 2. For 2 year olds, there was a negative relationship with breeding population size, suggesting that density dependence operated in this colony through limitation of food or some other resource. 3. Survival over the first 2 years of life varied with cohort, but was unrelated to the WNAO. Mean survival over this 2-year period was high at 0.576 (95% CI: 0.444; 0.708). 4. This high survival, combined with a low 'local' survival after age 5 years of 0.695 (0.654; 0.733) and observations of Isle of May chicks at other colonies, suggests that most surviving chicks return to the natal colony before deciding whether to recruit there or move elsewhere. © 2006 British Ecological Society.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Crespin, L., Harris, M. P., Lebreton, J. D., Frederiksen, M., & Wanless, S. (2006). Recruitment to a seabird population depends on environmental factors and on population size. Journal of Animal Ecology, 75(1), 228–238. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2656.2006.01035.x
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.