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10 March 2021 Experimental evidence that social information affects habitat selection in Marbled Murrelets
Jonathon J. Valente, S. Kim Nelson, James W. Rivers, Daniel D. Roby, Matthew G. Betts
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Abstract

Habitat selection decisions can impact individual fitness and ultimately scale up to mediate population dynamics. Understanding how birds select habitat is thus critical for discerning the biological processes structuring populations and for developing conservation strategies, particularly for species in decline. Marbled Murrelet (Brachyramphus marmoratus; hereafter murrelet) populations have declined in recent decades due to loss of late-successional forest nesting habitat and changing ocean conditions that impact foraging success. Most other seabirds in the family Alcidae nest colonially and evidence suggests nesting murrelets may aggregate in stands, yet no studies have examined murrelet use of social information in nest-site selection. In 2016, we experimentally simulated the presence of murrelets at 14 randomly chosen potential breeding sites by broadcasting murrelet calls throughout the breeding period. Between broadcasting bouts, we recorded calls of wild murrelets and compared call rates with those recorded at 14 control sites (no broadcast). One year after playbacks ceased (2017) we conducted breeding season surveys to document behaviors indicative of murrelet breeding activity. Broadcasting murrelet calls in 2016 increased daily odds of wild murrelets vocalizing during the treatment period by up to 15.4× (95% CI: 2.3, 125.4) relative to control sites. During the 2017 breeding season, the odds of occupancy were 10.0× (CI: 1.2, 81.4) greater at treatment sites than control sites. These results indicate that social information influences murrelet breeding site selection because the simulated conspecific presence in potential nesting habitat appeared to attract prospectors in 2016 that continued occupying treatment sites the following year. This conspecific attraction implies murrelet nesting sites are likely to remain occupied over time and that large tracts of nesting habitat may be important for supporting murrelet populations. Murrelets may also be susceptible to information-mediated Allee effects whereby a lack of conspecific information about nesting habitat could exacerbate long-term population declines.

LAY SUMMARY

  • We found that Marbled Murrelets are attracted to potential breeding areas based on the presence of other Marbled Murrelets.

  • The odds of murrelets occupying sites where we previously broadcast murrelet calls were about 10 times greater than at sites where we did not play calls.

  • Murrelet populations have been declining, and recovery may be hindered by the fact that there are few murrelets available to provide information to others about where to nest.

  • Managers could consider broadcasting vocalizations to encourage murrelets to nest in unused, high-quality habitat.

  • Because murrelets are attracted to other murrelets, protecting areas adjacent to known nesting sites may also be an effective conservation approach.

Copyright © American Ornithological Society 2021. All rights reserved. For permissions, e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.
Jonathon J. Valente, S. Kim Nelson, James W. Rivers, Daniel D. Roby, and Matthew G. Betts "Experimental evidence that social information affects habitat selection in Marbled Murrelets," Ornithology 138(2), 1-13, (10 March 2021). https://doi.org/10.1093/ornithology/ukaa086
Received: 22 July 2020; Accepted: 30 November 2020; Published: 10 March 2021
KEYWORDS
audio playback
Brachyramphus marmoratus
conspecific attraction
Marbled Murrelet
social attraction
social information
threatened seabirds
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