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28 January 2015 A century of change in Glaucous-winged Gull ( Larus glaucescens) populations in a dynamic coastal environment
Louise K. Blight, Mark C. Drever, Peter Arcese
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Abstract

As conspicuous midtrophic omnivores, gulls can serve as useful indicators to characterize long-term ecological changes in marine ecosystems. Glaucous-winged Gulls (Larus glaucescens) have been studied in the Georgia Basin of British Columbia, Canada, an urbanized coastal zone, since the late 1800s. We collated all available information to develop a (noncontinuous) 111-year time series of counts at breeding colonies, and combined these counts with demographic vital rates to assess how changes in historical gull egg harvesting practices, forage fish abundance, and Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) numbers affected gull population trajectories from 1900 to 2010. Mean counts at 87 breeding colonies in the Georgia Basin showed a nonlinear trend, increasing from historical low counts in the early part of the twentieth century to peak values in the 1980s, and declining thereafter to the end of the time series. Demographic models that integrated temporal trends in clutch size and nesting success, and which also included a food-related decline in first-year survival or a further reduction in nesting success as a function of eagle abundance, successfully reproduced trajectories of gull population growth rates over the study period. Glaucous-winged Gulls have thus responded to a series of changes in the Georgia Basin. These patterns are consistent with population release following cessation of egg harvesting; growing reliance by gulls on nonfish foods and resulting declines in clutch size, productivity, and first-year survival; and the effects of recovering Bald Eagle populations. These results highlight the value of compiling data from multiple retrospective studies to better understand the complex factors affecting long-term trends in animal populations.

Louise K. Blight, Mark C. Drever, and Peter Arcese "A century of change in Glaucous-winged Gull ( Larus glaucescens) populations in a dynamic coastal environment," The Condor 117(1), 108-120, (28 January 2015). https://doi.org/10.1650/CONDOR-14-113.1
Received: 17 July 2014; Accepted: 1 November 2014; Published: 28 January 2015
KEYWORDS
clutch size
Haliaeetus
Migratory Bird Convention Act
piscivore
population regulation
seabirds
shifting baselines
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