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Demographic responses to mercury exposure in two closely related Antarctic top predators
by
Bustamante, P.
, Goutte, A.
, Weimerskirch, H.
, Barbraud, C.
, Delord, K.
, Chastel, O.
in
adults
/ Animals
/ Antarctic region
/ Antarctic Regions
/ Antarctic zone
/ anthropogenic activities
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Archipelagoes
/ Breeding
/ Breeding success
/ Brown Skua
/ capture-recapture
/ Catharacta lonnbergi
/ Catharacta maccormicki
/ Charadriiformes - physiology
/ Climate Change
/ Climate effects
/ data collection
/ Demographics
/ Demography
/ Ecological modeling
/ Ecotoxicology
/ heavy metals
/ Induced breeding
/ Kerguelen Archipelago
/ Life Sciences
/ Marine ecology
/ Mercury
/ Mercury - toxicity
/ Parametric models
/ Pollutants
/ Pollution
/ Population decline
/ population dynamics
/ Population ecology
/ Population growth rate
/ population projections
/ Populus
/ Predation
/ Predators
/ prediction
/ reproductive performance
/ reproductive success
/ Sea birds
/ South Polar Skua
/ Southern Ocean
/ Stercorariidae
/ Survival
/ Survival analysis
/ survival rate
/ Survival rates
/ toxic substances
/ Toxicology
/ Water Pollutants, Chemical - toxicity
/ Wildlife
2014
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Demographic responses to mercury exposure in two closely related Antarctic top predators
by
Bustamante, P.
, Goutte, A.
, Weimerskirch, H.
, Barbraud, C.
, Delord, K.
, Chastel, O.
in
adults
/ Animals
/ Antarctic region
/ Antarctic Regions
/ Antarctic zone
/ anthropogenic activities
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Archipelagoes
/ Breeding
/ Breeding success
/ Brown Skua
/ capture-recapture
/ Catharacta lonnbergi
/ Catharacta maccormicki
/ Charadriiformes - physiology
/ Climate Change
/ Climate effects
/ data collection
/ Demographics
/ Demography
/ Ecological modeling
/ Ecotoxicology
/ heavy metals
/ Induced breeding
/ Kerguelen Archipelago
/ Life Sciences
/ Marine ecology
/ Mercury
/ Mercury - toxicity
/ Parametric models
/ Pollutants
/ Pollution
/ Population decline
/ population dynamics
/ Population ecology
/ Population growth rate
/ population projections
/ Populus
/ Predation
/ Predators
/ prediction
/ reproductive performance
/ reproductive success
/ Sea birds
/ South Polar Skua
/ Southern Ocean
/ Stercorariidae
/ Survival
/ Survival analysis
/ survival rate
/ Survival rates
/ toxic substances
/ Toxicology
/ Water Pollutants, Chemical - toxicity
/ Wildlife
2014
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Demographic responses to mercury exposure in two closely related Antarctic top predators
by
Bustamante, P.
, Goutte, A.
, Weimerskirch, H.
, Barbraud, C.
, Delord, K.
, Chastel, O.
in
adults
/ Animals
/ Antarctic region
/ Antarctic Regions
/ Antarctic zone
/ anthropogenic activities
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Archipelagoes
/ Breeding
/ Breeding success
/ Brown Skua
/ capture-recapture
/ Catharacta lonnbergi
/ Catharacta maccormicki
/ Charadriiformes - physiology
/ Climate Change
/ Climate effects
/ data collection
/ Demographics
/ Demography
/ Ecological modeling
/ Ecotoxicology
/ heavy metals
/ Induced breeding
/ Kerguelen Archipelago
/ Life Sciences
/ Marine ecology
/ Mercury
/ Mercury - toxicity
/ Parametric models
/ Pollutants
/ Pollution
/ Population decline
/ population dynamics
/ Population ecology
/ Population growth rate
/ population projections
/ Populus
/ Predation
/ Predators
/ prediction
/ reproductive performance
/ reproductive success
/ Sea birds
/ South Polar Skua
/ Southern Ocean
/ Stercorariidae
/ Survival
/ Survival analysis
/ survival rate
/ Survival rates
/ toxic substances
/ Toxicology
/ Water Pollutants, Chemical - toxicity
/ Wildlife
2014
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Demographic responses to mercury exposure in two closely related Antarctic top predators
Journal Article
Demographic responses to mercury exposure in two closely related Antarctic top predators
2014
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Overview
Although toxic chemicals constitute a major threat for wildlife, their effects have been mainly assessed at the individual level and under laboratory conditions. Predicting population-level responses to pollutants in natural conditions is a major and ultimate task in ecological and ecotoxicological research. The present study aims to estimate the effect of mercury (Hg) levels on future apparent survival rates and breeding performances. We used a long-term data set (∼10 years) and recently developed methodological tools on two closely related Antarctic top predators, the South Polar Skua
Catharacta maccormicki
from Adélie Land and the Brown Skua
C. lonnbergi
from the Kerguelen Archipelago. Adult survival rates and breeding probabilities were not affected by Hg levels, but breeding success in the following year decreased with increasing Hg levels. Although South Polar Skuas exhibited much lower Hg levels than Brown Skuas, they suffered from higher Hg-induced breeding failure. This species difference could be attributed to an interaction between Hg and other environmental perturbations, including climate change and a complex cocktail of pollutants. By including Hg-dependent demographic parameters in population models, we showed a weak population decline in response to increasing Hg levels. This demographic decline was more pronounced in South Polar Skuas than in Brown Skuas. Hence, Hg exposure differently affects closely related species. The wide range of environmental perturbations in Antarctic regions could exacerbate the demographic responses to Hg levels. In that respect, we urge future population modeling to take into account the coupled effects of climate change and anthropogenic pollution to estimate population projections.
Publisher
Ecological Society of America,CCSD
Subject
ISBN
0003345736000
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