Data from: Combined bottom-up and top-down pressures drive catastrophic population declines of Arctic skuas in Scotland
1. Understanding drivers of population change is critical for effective species conservation. In the northeast Atlantic Ocean, recent changes amongst seabird communities are linked to human and climate change impacts on foodwebs. Many species have declined severely, with food shortages and increased...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Understanding drivers of population change is critical for effective
species conservation. In the northeast Atlantic Ocean, recent changes
amongst seabird communities are linked to human and climate change impacts
on foodwebs. Many species have declined severely, with food shortages and
increased predation reducing productivity. Arctic skua Stercorarius
parasiticus, a kleptoparasite of other seabirds, is one such species. 2.
The aim of the study was to determine relative effects of bottom-up and
top-down pressures on Arctic skuas across multiple colonies in a rapidly
declining national population. 3. Long-term monitoring data were used to
quantify changes in population size and productivity of Arctic skuas,
their hosts (black-legged kittiwake Rissa tridactyla, common guillemot
Uria aalge, Atlantic puffin Fratercula arctica, Arctic tern Sterna
paradisaea), and an apex predator (great skua Stercorarius skua) over 24
years (1992–2015) in Scotland. We used digital mapping and statistical
models to determine relative effects of bottom-up (host productivity) and
top-down (great skua density) pressures on Arctic skuas across 33
colonies, and assess variation between three colony types classified by
host abundance. 4. Arctic skuas declined by 81% and their hosts by 42–92%,
whereas at most colonies great skuas increased. Annual productivity
declined in Arctic skuas and their hosts, and reduced Arctic skua breeding
success was a driver of the species’ population decline. Arctic skua
productivity was positively associated with annual breeding success of
hosts, and negatively with great skua density. Inter-colony variation
suggested Arctic skua trends and productivity were most sensitive to
top-down pressures at smaller colonies of host species where great skuas
had increased most, whereas bottom-up pressures dominated at large
colonies of host species. 5. Scotland’s Arctic skua population is
declining rapidly, with bottom-up and top-down pressures simultaneously
reducing breeding success to unsustainably low levels. Marine food web
alterations, strongly influenced by fisheries management and climate
change, are driving the decline, and this study demonstrates severe
vulnerability of seabirds to rapid change in human-modified ecosystems.
Potential but untested conservation solutions for Arctic skuas include
Marine Protected Areas, supplementary feeding within colonies, and
management of great skuas. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.v056r5h |