Understanding Oceanic Migrations with Intrinsic Biogeochemical Markers

Migratory marine vertebrates move annually across remote oceanic water masses crossing international borders. Many anthropogenic threats such as overfishing, bycatch, pollution or global warming put millions of marine migrants at risk especially during their long-distance movements. Therefore, precise knowledge about these migratory movements to understand where and when these animals are more exposed to human impacts is vital for addressing marine conservation issues. Because electronic tracking devices suffer from several constraints, mainly logistical and financial, there is emerging interest in finding appropriate intrinsic markers, such as the chemical composition of inert tissues, to study long-distance migrations and identify wintering sites. Here, using tracked pelagic seabirds and some of their own feathers which were known to be grown at different places and times within the annual cycle, we proved the value of biogeochemical analyses of inert tissue as tracers of marine movements and habitat use. Analyses of feathers grown in summer showed that both stable isotope signatures and element concentrations can signal the origin of breeding birds feeding in distinct water masses. However, only stable isotopes signalled water masses used during winter because elements mainly accumulated during the long breeding period are incorporated into feathers grown in both summer and winter. Our findings shed new light on the simple and effective assignment of marine organisms to distinct oceanic areas, providing new opportunities to study unknown migration patterns of secretive species, including in relation to human-induced mortality on specific populations in the marine environment.


More on Wikipedia

More on Sciencestage.com

    More on Answers.com

    More on Pubmed

      More on answers.yahoo.com

      News

      • Councilman aims to alleviate Marina budget-cutting pain
        It could be called the "cuts upfront" approach. Marina City Councilman Frank O'Connell, who has weathered laborious budget hearings with his colleagues the past two years, is proposing a different way of doing things.
      • In the Studio: How Here We Go Magic Met Nigel Godrich
        "When you're playing Glastonbury at 11 in the morning," Luke Temple begins, "you're playing to the people who are still awake and have no idea what's going on, or you're playing to mamas and daddies and their babies. It's that vibe." But in June of 2010, when Temple and his Brooklyn outfit Here We Go Magic took the legendary festival's Park Stage for the very first time, they were also playing ...