Table of content
 
Nordicana D50 / DOI : 10.5885/45591AW-F9B906CC647948E0

Monitoring of avian predator reproduction on Bylot Island, Nunavut, Canada

Gilles Gauthier1, Marie-Christine Cadieux1, Yannick Seyer1, Jean-François Therrien2

1 Département de biologie & Centre d'études nordiques, Université Laval
2 Acopian Center for Conservation Learning, Hawk Mountain Sanctuary


Abstract

Predators play a key role in the functioning of ecosystems and could potentially control the abundance of their prey. As predators are at the top of the food chain, they can be good indicators of the state of the tundra ecosystem. Avian predators, mostly raptors and seabirds, are the most diverse groups of predators in the Arctic tundra and range from specialists to generalists in terms of their diet. Most species of avian predators are migrants and are only present in the Arctic during the summer to reproduce. During the short Arctic summer, they can encounter harsh conditions that could affect their breeding effort, reproductive success or even their survival. Furthermore, these species are exposed to climate change, which is predicted to be most severe at northern latitudes. For instance, raptors have already started to experience loss of breeding habitats in some regions due to the collapse of their nesting structures cause by permafrost thawing. Changes in prey distribution and abundance can also impact avian predators, especially those that are diet specialists. Hence, implementing a monitoring program of avian predators can provide useful information on the status of these species, some of which are considered vulnerable, as well as on the health of the whole tundra ecosystem. This archive contains annual reproduction monitoring data for the four most abundant avian predators in our study area on Bylot Island: long-tailed jaegers, glaucous gulls, snowy owls and rough-legged hawks. The data set includes the GPS location of nests that are found through either systematic search along transects in suitable habitats for these species or opportunistically. We also report, whenever possible, clutch size, laying and hatching dates and hatching and fledging successes, based on observations during return visits to the nests during the breeding season. In addition, given that these predators share a common resource (lemmings) whose abundance varies considerably from year to year, it is possible to better understand the distribution of this prey among the main avian predators of the Bylot Island using data extracted from regurgitation pellets collected at nests. This publication also contains measurements of lemming mandibles taken from these pellets which allow the size of lemmings consumed among species to be determined during the breeding season (for more details, see Schmidt et al. 2020).

Data citation

Gauthier, G., Cadieux, M.-C., Seyer, Y., Therrien, J.-F. 2020. Monitoring of avian predator reproduction on Bylot Island, Nunavut, Canada, v. 1.2 (2004-2019). Nordicana D50, doi: 10.5885/45591AW-F9B906CC647948E0.

Location map


Key references

Beardsell A., G. Gauthier, D. Fortier, J.-F. Therrien & J. Bêty, 2017. Vulnerability to geomorphological hazards of an arctic cliff-nesting raptor, the rough-legged hawk. Arctic Science, 3:203-219 DOI: 10.1139/as-2016-0025.
Beardsell A., G. Gauthier, J.-F. Therrien & J. Bêty, 2016. Nest site characteristics, patterns of nest reuse and reproductive success in an arctic nesting raptor, the Rough-legged Hawk. The Auk, 133:718-732 DOI: 10.1642/AUK-16-54.1.
Gauthier, G., J. Bêty, M.-C. Cadieux, P. Legagneux, M. Doiron, C. Chevallier, S. Lai, A. Tarroux & D. Berteaux, 2013. Long-term monitoring at multiple trophic levels suggests heterogeneity in responses to climate change in the Canadian Arctic tundra. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B – Biological Sciences, 368:20120482 DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2012.0482.
Gauthier, G., P. Legagneux, M.-A. Valiquette, M.-C. Cadieux & J.-F. Therrien, 2015. Diet and reproductive success of an Arctic generalist predator: Interplay between variations in prey abundance, nest site location and intraguild predation. The Auk, 132:735-747 DOI: 10.1642/AUK-14-273.1.
Schmidt, E., D. Fauteux, J.-F. Therrien, G. Gauthier & Y. Seyer. 2020. Improving diet assessment of Arctic terrestrial predators with the size of rodent mandibles. Journal of Zoology, 311:23-32 DOI: 10.1111/jzo.12756.
Therrien, J.-F., D. Pinaud, G. Gauthier, N. Lecomte, K. L. Bildstein & J. Bêty, 2015. Is pre-breeding prospecting behaviour affected by snow cover in the irruptive snowy owl? A test using state-space modelling and environmental data annotated via Movebank. Movement Ecology, 3:1-8 DOI: 10.1186/s40462-015-0028-7.
Therrien, J.-F., G. Gauthier & J. Bêty, 2012. Survival and reproduction of adult snowy owls tracked by satellite. Journal of Wildlife Management, 76:1562-1567 DOI: 10.1002/jwmg.414.
Therrien, J.-F., G. Gauthier, A. Robillard, N. Lecomte & J. Bêty, 2015. Écologie de la reproduction du harfang des neiges dans l’Arctique canadien. Le Naturaliste Canadien, 139:17-23 DOI: 10.7202/1027666ar.
Therrien, J.-F., G. Gauthier, E. Korpimäki & J. Bêty, 2014. Predation pressure imposed by avian predators suggests summer limitation of small-mammal populations in the Canadian Arctic. Ecology, 95:56-67 DOI: 10.1890/13-0458.1.

Contributors

Bêty, Joël (Université du Québec à Rimouski)
Beardsell, Andréanne (Université Laval)
Robillard, Audrey (Université Laval)
Valiquette, Marc-André (Université Laval)

Acknowledgements

We thank Polar Knowledge Canada for funding the publication of this archive.

Related data

Polar Data Catalogue links (Metadata)

Status

Published

Version history

You can request for data from previous versions at nordicana@cen.ulaval.ca.


Version 1.2 (2004-2019) - Updated August 4, 2020
Version 1.1 (2004-2019) - Updated March 27, 2020
Version 1.0 (2004-2018) - Updated June 18, 2019

Measurement sites

  Site Latitude Longitude Altitude (m) Altitude maximale (m)
Maximum altitude (m)
More info
Vallée Qarlikturvik, Île Bylot, Nunavut / Qarlikturvik Valley, Bylot Island, Nunavut
73.15625 -79.97187 20
More info
Camp 3, Île Bylot, Nunavut / Camp 3, Bylot Island, Nunavut
73.04735 -80.07749 40
More info
Camp 2, Île Bylot, Nunavut / Camp 2, Bylot Island, Nunavut
72.88851 -79.90606 40
More info
Pointe Dufour, Île Bylot, Nunavut / Pointe Dufour, Bylot Island, Nunavut
72.78381 -79.53589 55

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