Title
Comparison of assemblages and some life-history traits of seabirds in the Humboldt and Benguela systems
Date Issued
01 January 2006
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
review
Author(s)
Instituto del Mar del Peru
University of North Carolina
Publisher(s)
National Inquiry Services Centre Ltd
Abstract
There are 21 and 15 species of seabirds that breed in the Humboldt and Benguela upwelling systems respectively. Only two species of gull are common to both systems, one as an endemic subspecies to the Benguela system. Eleven species and two subspecies are endemic (or nearly so) to the Humboldt system; seven species and one subspecies to the Benguela system. Each system has an endemic penguin, sulid, cormorant and tern that feed mainly on anchovy Engraulis spp., sardine Sardinops sagax or both these fish. The Peruvian pelican Pelecanus thagus also feeds primarily on these prey items. A plentiful availability of food has resulted in many of these seabirds attaining high levels of abundance. For the four pairs of species that feed on anchovy and sardine, those in the Humboldt system all have a biology that enables them to increase more rapidly than their Benguela counterparts. This reflects the higher frequency of environmental perturbations that depress seabird populations in the Humboldt system. In addition, both systems have a small endemic cormorant that feeds near the coast and a small endemic tern that breeds in the adjacent mainland desert and feeds at the sea surface. Several seabirds endemic to a system have no obvious ecological equivalent in the other system: the pelican, a diving-petrel, four storm-petrels and a gull in the Humboldt system; a cormorant and a gull in the Benguela system. Some species with tropical or subantarctic affinities breed at the boundaries of the systems. Others breed also in freshwater systems. The grey gull Larus modestus, which feeds in the Humboldt system, breeds in montane deserts. Copyright © NISC Pty Ltd.
Start page
553
End page
560
Volume
28
Issue
April 3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ingeniería marina, naves
Biología marina, Biología de agua dulce, Limnología
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-33846236875
Source
African Journal of Marine Science
ISSN of the container
1814232X
DOI of the container
10.2989/18142320609504205
Source funding
Baltic Sea Research Institute
Sponsor(s)
Acknowledgements — The paper was developed at a workshop funded by the Baltic Sea Research Institute, Warnemuende, Germany. Subsequent discussions were funded by the Benguela Current Large Marine Ecosystem Programme. We are grateful to our institutions for supporting this work. We thank J Cooper and A Simeone for making valuable comments, and J Alheit for initiating the comparison.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus