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Use of Social Information in Seabirds: Compass Rafts Indicate the Heading of Food Patches

机译:海鸟中社会信息的使用:指南针筏指示食物补丁的标题

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摘要

Ward and Zahavi suggested in 1973 that colonies could serve as information centres, through a transfer of information on the location of food resources between unrelated individuals (Information Centre Hypothesis). Using GPS tracking and observations on group movements, we studied the search strategy and information transfer in two of the most colonial seabirds, Guanay cormorants (Phalacrocorax bougainvillii) and Peruvian boobies (Sula variegata). Both species breed together and feed on the same prey. They do return to the same feeding zone from one trip to the next indicating high unpredictability in the location of food resources. We found that the Guanay cormorants use social information to select their bearing when departing the colony. They form a raft at the sea surface whose position is continuously adjusted to the bearing of the largest returning columns of cormorants. As such, the raft serves as a compass signal that gives an indication on the location of the food patches. Conversely, Peruvian boobies rely mainly on personal information based on memory to take heading at departure. They search for food patches solitarily or in small groups through network foraging by detecting the white plumage of congeners visible at long distance. Our results show that information transfer does occur and we propose a new mechanism of information transfer based on the use of rafts off colonies. The use of rafts for information transfer may be common in central place foraging colonial seabirds that exploit short lasting and/or unpredictably distributed food patches. Over the past decades Guanay cormorants have declined ten times whereas Peruvian boobies have remained relatively stable. We suggest that the decline of the cormorants could be related to reduced social information opportunities and that social behaviour and search strategies have the potential to play an important role in the population dynamics of colonial animals.
机译:沃德(Ward)和扎哈维(Zahavi)于1973年建议,通过在不相关的个​​人之间转移有关粮食资源位置的信息,可以将殖民地用作信息中心(信息中心假说)。通过使用GPS跟踪和对群体运动的观察,我们研究了在两个最具殖民地海鸟中的搜索策略和信息传递,它们分别是瓜纳伊cor(Phalacrocorax bougainvillii)和秘鲁bo鸟(Sula variegata)。两种物种共同繁殖并以相同的猎物为食。它们确实从一次旅行返回到下一次旅行,回到了同一喂养区域,这表明食物资源的位置具有高度的不可预测性。我们发现,关岛cor在离开殖民地时会使用社交信息来选择其方位。它们在海面形成筏,其位置不断调整以适应最大返回ing行的方位。这样,木筏用作指南针信号,用于指示食品块的位置。相反,秘鲁的ob鸟主要依靠基于记忆的个人信息出发。他们通过检测在远距离可见的同类物的白色羽毛,通过网络觅食单独或成群地搜索食物。我们的研究结果表明确实发生了信息转移,并且我们提出了一种基于利用远离殖民地的筏子进行信息转移的新机制。在中心地带使用木筏进行信息传递可能很普遍,它们在殖民地海鸟中觅食,这些海鸟利用持续时间短和/或分布不均的食物斑块。在过去的几十年中,瓜纳伊cor减少了十倍,而秘鲁的bo鸟则保持相对稳定。我们建议the的减少可能与减少社会信息机会有关,并且社会行为和搜索策略有可能在殖民地动物种群动态中发挥重要作用。

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