In seabirds, the relationship between flight speed and wind direction/speed is thought to be particularly important for studying energy-saving strategy and foraging habitat selection. In this study, we examined whether the ground and calculated air speeds of four great cormorants (Phalacrocorax carbo) were affected by wind conditions using high-resolution GPS data loggers. The birds increased their ground flight speed in tailwinds, decreased it in headwinds, and changed their air speed in relation to wind components. However, they did not change their foraging sites according to the wind conditions. They were likely to respond to moderate wind conditions by adjusting their air speed without changing their foraging sites.
1. Introduction
Understanding how environmental factors affect animal movements is of central importance to movement ecology [1]. In seabirds, the relationship between flight speed and wind direction/speed is thought to be particularly important for studying energy-saving strategy and foraging habitat selection and has been well examined [2, 3]. For example, the family Procellariiformes is likely to favour side or tailwinds at large scales (thousands of kilometres) [4, 5], which can reduce their energy expenditure [4] or lead sexually dimorphic species to be segregated in foraging areas [6]. Thus, the effects of winds are expected to exert strong selection pressures on morphology, behaviour, and the life histories of birds [7, 8]. However, several factors can bias the relationship between wind and flight speed in seabirds, especially at fine spatial scales (several to tens of kilometres). First, the flight paths of seabirds are often convoluted, making it difficult to relate flight paths with wind conditions. Second, because wind conditions change dramatically during short time periods, large-scale meteorology such as satellite-derived wind data is insufficient for detecting the effects of winds on bird flight at fine scales. Third, conventional analyses of air speed have been used in many bird studies (see papers cited in [9]), but this leads to erroneous interpretations of wind effects on bird flight [10]; statistically rigorous approaches need to be used [9].
In this study, we deployed fine-scaled GPS data loggers on free-ranging great cormorants (Phalacrocorax carbo) to evaluate the effects of winds on their ground speed (i.e., the speed of the bird with respect to the ground) and calculated air speed (i.e., the speed relative to the air in which the bird is flying). Cormorants often commute in a straight line to memorised foraging areas [11–13] and use powered flight with uninterrupted flapping without gliding; therefore, they are suitable for examining wind effects on seabird movements and expected to follow the theory of powered flight (e.g., [14]). In addition, because the maximum foraging range of the great cormorant is relatively small (less than 15 km; [15]), we could use local wind measurements that would be nearly identical to the winds that the birds encountered. We examined whether the ground and calculated air speeds of great cormorants were affected by wind conditions and we determined if they changed foraging sites according to wind conditions.
2. Materials and Methods
This study was conducted in June 2010 at the Unoyama breeding colony (34°48′N, 136°53′E) and the Ishigakiike colony (34°51′N, 136°36′E) in the Tokai region of Japan. Great cormorants nest on trees in these regions [16]. Because they temporally leave their nests when humans approach, we used alpha-chloralose (Tokyo Chemical Industry Co., Ltd., Tokyo, Japan) to capture specimens. Alpha-chloralose is an anaesthetic and it allowed us to capture cormorants safely. We inserted 35–40 mg of alpha-chloralose powder into the mouth of a fish (e.g., ayu Plecoglossus altivelis) and placed it on a nest that contained chicks using a fishing rod. After a bird ate the fish and was immobilised (within 1-2 h), we captured it. In total, we captured eight birds in this way. No birds were injured during the procedure. The procedures used in this study were approved by the Ministry of the Environment, Japan.
We deployed GPS loggers on four breeding adults, we deployed acceleration data loggers on two other birds for different research purposes, and we did not deploy any loggers on the remaining two birds. A small plastic base was attached to the bird’s back feathers with adhesive tape (Tesa, Hamburg, Germany) and glue (Loctite 401). A data logger was attached using a cable tie that could be cut remotely (RC-150-150T, Little Leonard, Tokyo, Japan), which entered beneath the feathers that were glued to the base. To avoid having to recapture of birds using alpha-chloralose, we used a remote release system that could send a signal to cut the cable tie (RX-100N, Little Leonard). After several days of attachment, we recovered the data loggers when the birds were on their nests.
A GPS data logger consisted of a GPS receiver with an antenna (GiPSy, Technosmart, Rome, Italy) and it was powered by a Li-SOCl2 battery (LS14500, SAFT, Paris, France). The GPS loggers were programmed to take positional fixes every 9 or 20 s. The overall mass was 59–84 g, which corresponded to <5% of each bird’s body mass. The birds did not appear to be negatively affected by the loggers or from being handled by the researchers.
We calculated trip duration and trip range, which was defined as the maximum distance from the colony. The cormorants commuted in a straight line without stopovers (Figure 1); therefore, we could easily define outward and homing flights using the sudden initial decrease and the final increase in ground flight speed, which marked the first flight and the final flight, respectively, during the trip (Figure 2). We defined foraging time as the period between the outward and homing flights; the foraging area was identified as the area where the bird remained during that period. For each outward and homing flight, flight speed and direction were averaged.
GPS tracks for four great cormorants during 15 foraging trips. The star and circle indicate the Unoyama and Ishigakiike breeding colonies, respectively. The two squares indicate the closest meteorological stations to each colony from which we derived wind information.
Example of time-series data of ground flight speed and distance from the colony. The shadows indicate outward and homing flights.
Wind direction and speed were recorded at two climatological stations operated by the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA). We used 10-min wind direction and speed measurements for each outward and homing flight. For each flight, several wind measurements were averaged. The weather stations were within 15 km of each colony (Figure 1; Minamichita station: 34°44′N, 136°56′E, 6.5 m asl; Tsu station: 34°44′N, 136°31′E, 39.6 m asl). For the outward and homing flights of each foraging trip, the absolute difference in the angle between flight direction and wind direction (i.e., 0–180°) was calculated. Wind speed in the direction of flight was calculated as the product of wind speed and the cosine of the angle. We calculated air speed using ground speed, wind speed, and the angle between the ground and wind vectors.
To examine the relationship between ground flight speed and wind speed in the direction of flight, a linear mixed model that treated individual birds as a random effect was run using the lme4 package in the statistical software R [17]. The significance of the fixed effects, as well as their 95% confidence intervals, was obtained from 100,000 Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) simulations performed using the pvals.fnc function in R [18].
A two-dimensional generalised additive model (GAM) was used to analyse the relationship between air speed and wind [9]. The GAM was used instead of the conventional method that tests the relationship between air speed as a function of ground speed and air speed (see papers cited in [9]) because the conventional analysis can produce erroneous correlations [9, 10]. We divided the wind variable into two components (i.e., zonal and meridional components); the eastern direction was represented by positive values of xw and the northern direction by positive values of yw. The two variables were implemented in a GAM by first transforming them via a LOESS smoother (a locally weighted regression) with a maximum span of 80% and 2 degrees of freedom, following [9]. To fit the GAM, we used the gam package in R [19].
To examine the degree of overlap in foraging areas between successive trips, we calculated the proportion of the foraging area of one trip that was covered by the foraging area of another trip, that is HR[i,j]=A[i,j]/A[i], where A[i,j] is the area of the intersection between the two foraging areas and A[i] is the foraging area of trip i [20]. These were calculated for two birds that conducted six successive trips. This analysis was performed using the adehabitat package in R [21]. We excluded one trip from this analysis because the bird’s position was not obtained consistently in the foraging area (Trip no. 4 in Table 1).
Foraging area overlap in two great cormorants, the proportion of the foraging area of one trip that was covered by the foraging area of another trip, that is HR[i,j] = A[i,j]/A[i], where A[i,j] is the area of the intersection between the two foraging areas and A[i] is the foraging area of trip i. The trip no. 4 of Bird A was not used because the bird's position was not obtained consistently in the foraging area.
i
j
1
2
3
4
5
6
Bird A
1
—
0.18
0.06
—
0.46
0.14
2
0.39
—
0.12
—
0.72
0.26
3
0.94
0.90
—
—
0.99
0.35
5
0.70
0.50
0.09
—
—
0.24
6
0.47
0.39
0.07
—
0.51
—
Bird C
1
—
0.87
0.04
0.13
0.72
0.99
2
0.54
—
0.02
0.08
0.62
0.98
3
1.00
1.00
—
1.00
1.00
1.00
4
1.00
1.00
0.29
—
1.00
1.00
5
0.59
0.82
0.03
0.11
—
0.89
6
0.27
0.43
0.01
0.04
0.30
—
Data were analysed using Matlab version 7.1 (MathWorks, Inc., Natick, MA, USA) and R version 2.14.1 [22].
3. Results
We obtained GPS data from four birds with body masses ranging from 1570 to 2140 g (mean=1905 g). The birds were named A, B (Unoyama colony), C, and D (Ishigakiike colony). The GPS loggers recorded 15 trips that consisted of 12 complete trips and 3 trips with truncated data due to exhausted batteries. Mean trip duration and trip range were 5.1±4.8 h (0.7–19.0 h, n=12) and 13.1±3.8 km (8.6–18.7 km, n=12), respectively, for complete trips. For the truncated data, we only used the outward flights in our analysis. Finally, we obtained 27 outward and homing paths.
Average flight duration was 11 min (4–23 min, n=27). Average wind speed on each path was 2.7±1.4 m/s (0.8–5.3, n=27). Mean ground and air speeds on the paths were 14.4±1.7 m/s (11.2–18.5, n=27) and 14.6±1.3 m/s (11.2–17.5, n=27; Figure 4(a)), respectively.
Ground flight speed increased significantly with wind strength relative to the birds (Figure 4(b)). A linear mixed model estimated S=0.70 (±0.10, 0.48–0.91; SD, 95% CI). W+14.4 (±0.31, 13.4–15.1), where S and W were ground flight speed and wind speed, respectively, in the direction of flight (P<0.001). Air speed was significantly related to xw (F=5.2, P<0.05), but not to yw (F=1.7, P=0.2). Thus, air speed was only influenced by wind that was blowing east-west (Figure 5).
Successive trips by two birds qualitatively showed high foraging-site fidelity and the foraging areas overlapped (Table 1; Figure 6).
4. Discussion
Great cormorants encountered various wind speeds and directions (Figure 3). The birds sometimes encountered contrasting wind conditions between outward and homing trips. Although sample size was small (four individuals), our data clearly demonstrated that the ground speed of great cormorants can be predicted by wind speed in the direction of flight (Figure 4(b)). Their ground flight speed increased in tailwinds and decreased in headwinds. Qualitatively, this matches very well with observations from visual surveys in which ground flight speeds of great cormorants in tailwinds were higher than in headwinds [23]. In addition, [23] reported a mean ground speed of 18.8 m/s in a strong tailwind (6.5 m/s), which agrees very well with our mixed-model prediction of 19.0 m/s. On the other hand, [23] also reported a ground speed of 12.4 m/s in an extreme headwind (8.0 m/s), which was higher than our predicted value of 8.8 m/s in a similar wind. Great cormorants prefer to fly close to the ground (i.e., ground effect; weak wind speeds closer to the ground ~0.3 m) when flying into strong headwinds [23]; therefore, our predictive equation seems to underestimate their ground speed in such extreme headwinds, that is, outside our measured range (>5 m/s of wind speed).
Two examples of wind conditions and GPS positions. The Bird A encountered different wind conditions between outward and homing trips in (a) Trip no. 2 and (b) Trip no. 6, respectively. The star indicates the Unoyama breeding colony. The dots show the GPS positions that were interpolated at 1 min to produce a clearer display and the colour indicates the ground speed of the bird. Arrows indicate travel direction. The two rose plots on each panel show the frequency of occurrence of wind direction, which is the direction from which the wind was blowing (not where it was blowing to), and wind speed (colour) during outward and homing flights.
(a) Measured ground speeds and calculated air speeds for great cormorants and (b) the relationship between ground speed and wind speed in the direction of flight (tailwind component along the track direction). The solid line is the best fit that was estimated by a linear mixed model: the dashed lines indicate the 95% confidence intervals.
The predicted relative influence of the wind components (xw and yw) on the air speed of great cormorants. The eastern direction was represented by positive values of xw and the northern direction by positive values of yw. Calculated air speed was significantly related to xw, but not to yw. The solid lines are the fitted functional response and the broken lines represent standard error curves.
Foraging area overlap in two great cormorants that conducted multiple foraging trips. The 95% contours of the kernel density estimates of the foraging areas are shown for (a) Bird A and (b) Bird C (see Table 1). The two rose plots show the frequency of occurrence of wind direction, which is the direction from which the wind was blowing (not where it was blowing to), and wind speed (colour) during outward and homing flights.
The calculated air speeds of our birds (14.6 m/s) ranged between previously reported minimum power speeds (Vmp) for this species (13.5 [24] to 16.5 m/s [23]), which is the speed at which the least mechanical power is required from the flight muscles to maintain the bird flying at a constant air speed [25]. Therefore, great cormorants might adopt Vmp as was indicated for Kerguelen shag P. verrucosus [26]. However, the great cormorants showed changes in calculated air speed in relation to wind components (Figure 5). Optimal flight theory predicts that Vmp will be unaffected by winds [7]; therefore, air speed optimization [27] might explain changes in calculated air speed in relation to wind conditions, as found in this study. Because air and ground flight speed are approximately equivalent in calm wind conditions, the actual air speed in this study might show the same relationship to the wind as the ground speed (Figure 4(b)). If air speed decreases in tailwinds and increases in headwinds, this means that the birds adopted maximum range speed (Vmr), which is the air speed where energy expenditure per distance travelled is minimal [27], and our data might support the optimality theory in relation to wind condition. Further study that incorporates morphological and actual air-speed measurements would be needed to clarify this issue.
Notably, the great cormorants showed strong foraging-site fidelity (Table 1; Figure 6), which is common in cormorants [12, 28, 29], irrespective of wind conditions. This might be related to low predictability of wind conditions in this study area, and therefore, foraging site selection based on wind would not be efficient in contrast to some seabirds that live in “predictable” local wind conditions at large spatial scales [3, 5, 29]. In addition, because the cormorants using pure powered flight could not efficiently extract energy compared to gliders such as shearwaters [5], albatrosses [4], boobies, and gannets [3, 30], they did not select foraging sites based on winds. The significant levels of foraging-site fidelity in successive foraging trips also suggest that their prey may be predictable in space within a period of several days and that the cormorants are able to remember specific foraging sites [12, 31, 32]. In general, seabirds with small foraging ranges and corresponding short trip durations, as was the case in this study (5 h in mean trip duration), are likely to have higher foraging site fidelity because the low probability of extreme changes in food availability [32]. Additionally, one of the main prey of the cormorants in this study area is the mullet (Mugil cephalus) [33], an herbivorous bottom feeder. Therefore, although the distribution might be relatively stable, it could slowly change over time, reflecting subtle movements of foraging sites of the cormorants between their trips (Figure 6).
In conclusion, the ground and air speeds of great cormorants were affected by prevailing wind conditions. However, wind conditions did not produce variations in foraging sites. Thus, great cormorants were likely to respond to moderate wind conditions by adjusting their air speed but without changing the location of foraging sites.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank H. Fujii, H. Kuroki, and Y. Inoue for their help during data collection. This work was financially supported by Grants from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science to K. Yoda (20519002 and 24681006) and by the program Bio-Logging Science of the University of Tokyo.
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