Authors
Anthony J Gaston, H Grant Gilchrist, Mark L Mallory
Publication date
2005/6
Journal
Ecography
Volume
28
Issue
3
Pages
331-344
Publisher
Munksgaard International Publishers
Description
The maximum extent of sea ice in the northern hemisphere has been contracting for several decades, with implications for all ice‐associated biota. To determine how variation in ice conditions affects reproduction in marine birds, we studied the effects of ice conditions on breeding of four species of seabirds over four years at Prince Leopold Island, Nunavut, a colony close to the limits of ice conditions where breeding is feasible. In 2000 and 2003, open water was present close to the colony in June, when the birds began to lay eggs. In 2001 and 2002, the ice edge in June was >200 km to the east of the colony, forcing birds to commute long distances to open water to feed. Egg‐laying by thick‐billed murres, black‐legged kittiwakes and glaucous gulls was delayed and eggs and clutches were smaller in 2001 and 2002. However, northern fulmars laid at the same time in all years, although their incubation shifts were …
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