Effect of the diel light cycle on the diving behaviour of two bottom feeding marine birds: the blue-eyed shag Phalacrocorax atriceps and the Europeanshag P-aristotelis
S. Wanless et al., Effect of the diel light cycle on the diving behaviour of two bottom feeding marine birds: the blue-eyed shag Phalacrocorax atriceps and the Europeanshag P-aristotelis, MAR ECOL-PR, 188, 1999, pp. 219-224
Consistent diel patterns in foraging depths have been recorded in several a
vian predators which feed on pelagic prey, but nothing is known about such
effects in bottom feeding seabirds. In the underwater environment, illumina
tion is influenced primarily by water depth. Thus a predator's ability to e
xploit feeding areas located in deep water could, theoretically, be constra
ined by light availability. We investigated the effects of the diel light c
ycle on the diving behaviour of 2 species of bottom feeding seabird: the bl
ue-eyed shag Phalacrocorax atriceps and the European shag P. aristotelis. T
ime-based data loggers were attached to 22 blue-eyed shags and 21 European
shags and used to obtain detailed and concurrent records of foraging condit
ions in terms of depth and illumination during the chick-rearing period. Bo
th species were exclusively diurnal feeders. There were marked differences
in mean foraging depth and foraging illumination between individual birds (
blue-eyed shag: ranges 3.2 to 73.3 m and -0.3 to 2.0 log(10) lx; European s
hag: 8.5 to 34.6 m and 0.9 to 2.0 log(10) lx). Superimposed on this variati
on was a consistent effect whereby individuals significantly modified their
diving behaviour in response to the diel light cycle, in accord with the p
rediction that foraging depths would be maximised when ambient illumination
was highest. However, it appeared that individuals did not fully exploit t
he potential of this diel effect since, although foraging depths in the mid
dle of the day were generally deeper, the associated illumination was highe
r than that experienced during shallower dives made earlier or later in the
day. Nevertheless, we believe that diel effects can play an important role
in shaping the foraging behaviour of bottom feeding, avian predators.