[OANNES Foro] El Niño in the Warm Tropics: local sea temperature predicts breeding parameters and growth of blue-footed boobies

Mario Cabrejos casal en infotex.com.pe
Mar Jun 7 08:02:29 PDT 2011


Journal of Animal Ecology
Volume 80, Issue 4, pages 799-808, July 2011
Article first published online: 2 MAR 2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2656.2011.01821.x

El Niño in the Warm Tropics: local sea temperature predicts breeding parameters and growth of blue-footed boobies
Sergio Ancona1,*, Salvador Sánchez-Colón2, Cristina Rodríguez1, Hugh Drummond1
1 Departamento de Ecología Evolutiva, Instituto de Ecología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, A.P. 70-275, México D.F. 04510, México2 Consultoría Ambiental y Estadística, Cerrada de Cortés 43, México D.F. 01049, México*Correspondence: Sergio Ancona, E-mail: ancona.s en gmail.com
Summary
1. There is increasing interest in the impacts of El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) on reproduction of apical predators such as seabirds and marine mammals. Long-term studies documenting ENSO effects on reproduction of seabirds in the warm tropics are scarce, and differential sensitivity of breeding parameters to ENSO has rarely been explored.

2. Analysis of 18 years of breeding data from a colony of the blue-footed booby Sula nebouxii (Milne-Edwards) showed a delay in onset of breeding when the global Southern Oscillation Index was negative; each unit of the atmospheric pressure differential (hPa) across the Pacific Ocean meant a delay of 7 days.

3. ENSO conditions also produced declines in breeding participation, clutch size, brood size, hatching success and fledging success, especially when surface waters surrounding the colony were warmer during winter and spring. Each additional degree (°C) of water temperature produced a reduction of 0·45 fledglings per nest. Different breeding parameters were sensitive to ENSO indices in different blocks of months.

4. Warming of local waters during the winter was associated with decline in ocean productivity in the current year and the following year, consistent with ENSO impacts on breeding parameters being mediated by effects on local productivity and prey availability. However, there was no evidence of lagged effects of ENSO on any breeding parameter.

5. Comparison of 5 years revealed that when local surface waters were warm, chicks grew more slowly, but no effects of ENSO on weight and size of eggs were evident in data of 9 and 7 years, respectively.

6. Our findings extend evidence of impacts of ENSO on seabird reproduction to the eastern tropical Pacific and indicate that several breeding parameters of blue-footed boobies (but not egg size) are affected in the short term by ENSO conditions, particularly by local anomalies in sea surface temperature associated with decline in ocean productivity.
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