A mechanistic link between chick diet and decline in seabirds?
- 8 November 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 273 (1585) , 445-450
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2005.3351
Abstract
A climatic regime shift during the mid-1970s in the North Pacific resulted in decreased availability of lipid-rich fish to seabirds and was followed by a dramatic decline in number of kittiwakes breeding on the Pribilof Islands. Although production of chicks in the mid-1970s was adequate to sustain kittiwake populations in the early 1980s, the disappearance of birds from breeding colonies apparently exceeded recruitment. No mechanism has been proposed to explain why recruitment would differ among fledglings fed lipid-rich or lipid-poor fish during development. Here we show that diets low in lipids induce nutritional stress and impair cognitive abilities in young red-legged kittiwakes, Rissa brevirostris. Specifically, growth retardation, increased secretion of stress hormones and inferior ability to associate food distribution with visual cues were observed in individuals fed lipid-poor diets. We conclude that lipid-poor diets during development affect the quality of young seabirds, which is likely to result in their increased mortality and low recruitment.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nutritional deficits during early development affect hippocampal structure and spatial memory later in life.Behavioral Neuroscience, 2005
- The role of industrial fisheries and oceanographic change in the decline of North Sea black‐legged kittiwakesJournal of Applied Ecology, 2004
- The Effect of Food Restriction on Morphological and Metabolic Development in Two Lines of Growing Japanese Quail ChicksPhysiological and Biochemical Zoology, 2001
- Nestling growth and song repertoire size in great reed warblers: evidence for song learning as an indicator mechanism in mate choiceProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2000
- Apparent inferiority of first‐time breeders in the kittiwake: the role of heterogeneity among age classesJournal of Animal Ecology, 2000
- How Do Glucocorticoids Influence Stress Responses? Integrating Permissive, Suppressive, Stimulatory, and Preparative ActionsEndocrine Reviews, 2000
- Metabolic and Developmental Responses of Alcid Chicks to Experimental Variation in Food IntakePhysiological and Biochemical Zoology, 1999
- Community reorganization in the Gulf of Alaska following ocean climate regime shiftMarine Ecology Progress Series, 1999
- Song Learning, Early Nutrition and Sexual Selection in SongbirdsAmerican Zoologist, 1998
- Diet and Postnatal Growth in Red-Legged and Black-Legged Kittiwakes: An Interspecies ComparisonColonial Waterbirds, 1998