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    Population dynamics of wandering albatrosses Diomedea exulans at sub-Antarctic Marion Island: longline fishing and environmental influences

    Request Meeting Document
    Document Number:
    WG-FSA-02/16
    Author(s):
    D.C. Nel, P.G. Ryan and J. Cooper (South Africa)
    Agenda Item(s)
    Abstract

    The Prince Edward Islands support the largest breeding population of the vulnerable Wandering Albatross Diomedea exulans. The number of birds breeding in this population has fluctuated over the past three decades and appears to be the result of both real changes in the size of the population and changes in the proportion of the population that attempts to breed in a given year. We describe changes in several demographic parameters that appear to be influenced by both environmental and anthropogenic effects. The proportion of first-time breeders in the population was positively correlated with the maximum ENSO index, while the annual survival rates of breeding adults was negatively correlated with Japanese pelagic longline fishing effort in the Southern Indian Ocean. Adult survival rates were significantly correlated with those recorded on neighbouring Possesion Island (Crozet Islands) but differed from those at South Georgia, suggesting common factors operating at ocean-basin scale. The average survival rate of adult females was lower than that of males. Males who lost partners took 40% longer than females to find a new mate, suggesting a male-biased population. Survival rates of juvenile males and females did not differ. The age distribution of first-time breeders has shifted progressively towards younger birds during the 1990s. Higher than expected survival rates of breeding adults during the late 1990s may be linked to large amounts of supplementary food being made available by the initiation of a longline fishery for Patagonian Toothfish Dissostichus eleginoides close to the islands during this time. Overall, breeding success was better than recorded at other localities, indicating that breeding conditions at Marion Island were favorable. The implementation of international conservation initiatives to reduce the impact of longline fishing on this species and improve its conservation status, is recommended.