Meso- and submesoscales (fronts, eddies, filaments) in surface ocean flow have a crucial influence on marine ecosystems. Their dynamics partly control the foraging behavior and the displacement of marine top predators (tuna, birds, turtles, and cetaceans). In this work we focus on the role of submesoscale structures in the Mozambique Channel in the distribution of a marine predator, the Great Frigatebird.
Using a newly developed dynamic concept, the finite-size Lyapunov exponent (FSLE), we identified Lagrangian coherent structures
(LCSs) present in the surface flow in the channel over a 2-month observation period (August and September 2003). By comparing seabird satellite positions with LCS locations, we demonstrate that
frigatebirds track precisely these structures in the Mozambique Channel,
providing the first evidence that a top predator is able to track
these FSLE ridges to locate food patches. After comparing bird
positions during long and short trips and different parts of these trips,
we propose several hypotheses to understand how frigatebirds can
follow these LCSs. The birds might use visual and/or olfactory cues
and/or atmospheric current changes over the structures to move
along these biologic corridors. The birds being often associated with
tuna schools around foraging areas, a thorough comprehension of
their foraging behavior and movement during the breeding season is
crucial not only to seabird ecology but also to an appropriate ecosystemic
approach to fisheries in the channel.
%0 Journal Article
%1 tew_kai_top_2009
%A Tew Kai, E.
%A Rossi, V.
%A Sudre, J.
%A Weimerskirch, H.
%A Lopez, C.
%A Hernandez-Garcia, E.
%A Marsac, F.
%A Garçon, V.
%D 2009
%J Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
%K Lagrangian NOAA Oceanography, \_tablet, cetacean, chaos, eddies, key, modelling, pelagic, predator, seabirds, structures, tag-and-track
%N 20
%P 8245
%T Top marine predators track Lagrangian coherent structures
%U http://www.pnas.org/content/106/20/8245.short
%V 106
%X Meso- and submesoscales (fronts, eddies, filaments) in surface ocean flow have a crucial influence on marine ecosystems. Their dynamics partly control the foraging behavior and the displacement of marine top predators (tuna, birds, turtles, and cetaceans). In this work we focus on the role of submesoscale structures in the Mozambique Channel in the distribution of a marine predator, the Great Frigatebird.
Using a newly developed dynamic concept, the finite-size Lyapunov exponent (FSLE), we identified Lagrangian coherent structures
(LCSs) present in the surface flow in the channel over a 2-month observation period (August and September 2003). By comparing seabird satellite positions with LCS locations, we demonstrate that
frigatebirds track precisely these structures in the Mozambique Channel,
providing the first evidence that a top predator is able to track
these FSLE ridges to locate food patches. After comparing bird
positions during long and short trips and different parts of these trips,
we propose several hypotheses to understand how frigatebirds can
follow these LCSs. The birds might use visual and/or olfactory cues
and/or atmospheric current changes over the structures to move
along these biologic corridors. The birds being often associated with
tuna schools around foraging areas, a thorough comprehension of
their foraging behavior and movement during the breeding season is
crucial not only to seabird ecology but also to an appropriate ecosystemic
approach to fisheries in the channel.
@article{tew_kai_top_2009,
abstract = {Meso- and submesoscales (fronts, eddies, filaments) in surface ocean flow have a crucial influence on marine ecosystems. Their dynamics partly control the foraging behavior and the displacement of marine top predators (tuna, birds, turtles, and cetaceans). In this work we focus on the role of submesoscale structures in the Mozambique Channel in the distribution of a marine predator, the Great Frigatebird.
Using a newly developed dynamic concept, the finite-size Lyapunov exponent (FSLE), we identified Lagrangian coherent structures
(LCSs) present in the surface flow in the channel over a 2-month observation period (August and September 2003). By comparing seabird satellite positions with LCS locations, we demonstrate that
frigatebirds track precisely these structures in the Mozambique Channel,
providing the first evidence that a top predator is able to track
these FSLE ridges to locate food patches. After comparing bird
positions during long and short trips and different parts of these trips,
we propose several hypotheses to understand how frigatebirds can
follow these LCSs. The birds might use visual and/or olfactory cues
and/or atmospheric current changes over the structures to move
along these biologic corridors. The birds being often associated with
tuna schools around foraging areas, a thorough comprehension of
their foraging behavior and movement during the breeding season is
crucial not only to seabird ecology but also to an appropriate ecosystemic
approach to fisheries in the channel.},
added-at = {2017-01-09T13:57:26.000+0100},
author = {Tew Kai, E. and Rossi, V. and Sudre, J. and Weimerskirch, H. and Lopez, C. and Hernandez-Garcia, E. and Marsac, F. and Garçon, V.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/25b26cee494e7d98d871b61a1e96df339/yourwelcome},
interhash = {3d3d87f3b37db73facad421670eb7ca3},
intrahash = {5b26cee494e7d98d871b61a1e96df339},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences},
keywords = {Lagrangian NOAA Oceanography, \_tablet, cetacean, chaos, eddies, key, modelling, pelagic, predator, seabirds, structures, tag-and-track},
number = 20,
pages = 8245,
timestamp = {2017-01-09T14:01:11.000+0100},
title = {Top marine predators track {Lagrangian} coherent structures},
url = {http://www.pnas.org/content/106/20/8245.short},
urldate = {2012-08-10},
volume = 106,
year = 2009
}