2024-03-28T13:02:53Zhttps://eprints.lib.hokudai.ac.jp/dspace-oai/requestoai:eprints.lib.hokudai.ac.jp:2115/400802022-11-17T02:08:08Zhdl_2115_20049hdl_2115_141Seasonal and inter-annual oceanographic changes induce diet switching in a piscivorous seabirdIto, MotohiroMinami, HiroshiTanaka, YuzanWatanuki, YutakaPrey switchingStable isotope signaturesRhinoceros aukletsAnchovyTsushima Current468The structure of a marine food web can change quickly within seasons as well as interannually in response to physical oceanographic changes. In this study, we examined the relationship between temporal changes in the marine ecosystem of northern Hokkaido, Japan, and diets of rhinoceros auklets Cerorhinca monocerata breeding in this region. To obtain an integrated measure of changes in diet composition on short (days) and inter-annual (2004 and 2005) time scales, we used a 2-pronged approach. We examined (1) the diets of adults using stomach contents and stable isotope signatures in tissues, and (2) chick diets using the composition of bill-loads delivered to chicks. During the incubation period, the diet of adults comprised euphausiids (Thysanoessa longipes and T inermis). During the chick-rearing period, the diet of adults was age 0 Japanese sandlance Ammodytes personatus and age 0 Japan Sea greenling Pleurogrammus azonus in the early period, but switched quickly (<10 d) to warm-water-preferring Japanese anchovy Engraulis japonicus when the warm Tsushima Current intruded into their foraging range. Adult blood plasma stable isotope ratios reflected these seasonal changes in stomach content. Diets did not differ between age categories. Furthermore, the timing of diet switching to anchovy differed inter-annually, and was about 10 d later in 2005 than 2004, reflecting a difference in the timing of the intrusion of warm water. We conclude that rhinoceros auklets respond sensitively to current-related rapid marine food web changes.Inter-ResearchJournal Articleapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2115/40080https://eprints.lib.hokudai.ac.jp/dspace/bitstream/2115/40080/1/MEPS393_273-284.pdf0171-8630Marine Ecology Progress Series3932732842009-10-30enginfo:doi/10.3354/meps08192© 2009 Inter-Researchpublisher