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Reduced breeding success in Great Black-backed Gulls (Larus marinus) due to harness-mounted GPS device
Authors:Samuel Langlois Lopez  Gary D. Clewley  Daniel T. Johnston  Francis Daunt  Jared M. Wilson  Nina J. O'Hanlon  Elizabeth Masden
Affiliation:1. Environmental Research Institute, UHI North Highland, Ormlie Road, Thurso, KW14 7EE UK;2. BTO Scotland, Stirling University Innovation Park, Stirling, FK9 4NF UK;3. UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Bush Estate, Penicuik, Midlothian, EH26 0QB UK;4. Marine Scotland Science, 375 Victoria Road, Aberdeen, AB11 9DB UK

Contribution: Funding acquisition, Validation, Visualization, Supervision, Project administration

Abstract:Animal-borne bio-logging devices are routinely fitted to seabirds to learn about their behaviour and physiology, as well as their interactions with the marine environment. The assessment and reporting of deleterious impacts from such devices on the individuals carrying them is critical to inform future work and improve data quality and animal welfare. We assessed the impacts of thoracic-harness attachments on the breeding performance and inter-annual return rates of Great Black-backed Gulls. We found that tagged individuals hatched fewer eggs per nest (0.67) than two different control groups (handled but not tagged – 2.0, and not handled – 1.9) and had lower hatching success rates per nest (27% compared with 81% and 82% in control groups). Inter-annual return rates were similar between tagged and control groups, but the harness attachment potentially caused the death of an individual 5 days after deployment. Overall, the harness attachment was a lead driver of nest failure. We urge extreme caution for those wanting to use harness-mounted devices on Great Black-backed Gulls.
Keywords:animal welfare  device effects  seabird thoracic harness  seabird tracking
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