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Dive into the research topics where Heather M. Renner is active.

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Featured researches published by Heather M. Renner.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Foraging responses of black-legged kittiwakes to prolonged food-shortages around colonies on the Bering Sea shelf.

Rosana Paredes; Rachael A. Orben; Robert M. Suryan; David B. Irons; Daniel D. Roby; Ann M. A. Harding; Rebecca C. Young; Kelly J. Benoit-Bird; Carol Ladd; Heather M. Renner; Scott A. Heppell; Richard A. Phillips; Alexander S. Kitaysky

We hypothesized that changes in southeastern Bering Sea foraging conditions for black-legged kittiwakes (Rissa tridactyla) have caused shifts in habitat use with direct implications for population trends. To test this, we compared at-sea distribution, breeding performance, and nutritional stress of kittiwakes in three years (2008–2010) at two sites in the Pribilof Islands, where the population has either declined (St. Paul) or remained stable (St. George). Foraging conditions were assessed from changes in (1) bird diets, (2) the biomass and distribution of juvenile pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) in 2008 and 2009, and (3) eddy kinetic energy (EKE; considered to be a proxy for oceanic prey availability). In years when biomass of juvenile pollock was low and patchily distributed in shelf regions, kittiwake diets included little or no neritic prey and a much higher occurrence of oceanic prey (e.g. myctophids). Birds from both islands foraged on the nearby shelves, or made substantially longer-distance trips overnight to the basin. Here, feeding was more nocturnal and crepuscular than on the shelf, and often occurred near anticyclonic, or inside cyclonic eddies. As expected from colony location, birds from St. Paul used neritic waters more frequently, whereas birds from St. George typically foraged in oceanic waters. Despite these distinctive foraging patterns, there were no significant differences between colonies in chick feeding rates or fledging success. High EKE in 2010 coincided with a 63% increase in use of the basin by birds from St. Paul compared with 2008 when EKE was low. Nonetheless, adult nutritional stress, which was relatively high across years at both colonies, peaked in birds from St. Paul in 2010. Diminishing food resources in nearby shelf habitats may have contributed to kittiwake population declines at St Paul, possibly driven by increased adult mortality or breeding desertion due to high foraging effort and nutritional stress.


The Condor | 2006

COLONY MAPPING: A NEW TECHNIQUE FOR MONITORING CREVICE-NESTING SEABIRDS

Heather M. Renner; Martin Renner; Joel H. Reynolds; Ann M. A. Harding; Ian L. Jones; David B. Irons; G. Vernon Byrd

Abstract Monitoring populations of auklets and other crevice-nesting seabirds remains problematic, although numerous methods have been attempted since the mid-1960s. Anecdotal evidence suggests several large auklet colonies have recently decreased in both abundance and extent, concurrently with vegetation encroachment and succession. Quantifying changes in the geographical extent of auklet colonies may be a useful alternative to monitoring population size directly. We propose a standardized method for colony mapping using a randomized systematic grid survey with two components: a simple presence/absence survey and an auklet evidence density survey. A quantitative auklet evidence density index was derived from the frequency of droppings and feathers. This new method was used to map the colony on St. George Island in the southeastern Bering Sea and results were compared to previous colony mapping efforts. Auklet presence was detected in 62 of 201 grid cells (each grid cell  =  2500 m2) by sampling a randomly placed 16 m2 plot in each cell; estimated colony area  =  155 000 m2. The auklet evidence density index varied by two orders of magnitude across the colony and was strongly correlated with means of replicated counts of birds socializing on the colony surface. Quantitatively mapping all large auklet colonies is logistically feasible using this method and would provide an important baseline for monitoring colony status. Regularly monitoring select colonies using this method may be the best means of detecting changes in distribution and population size of crevice-nesting seabirds.


Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research | 2017

Crevice-Nesting Auklets are Early-Successional Species Requiring Disturbance to Persist

Heather M. Renner; Lawrence R. Walker; Christopher F. Waythomas; Jeffrey C. Williams; Yuri Artukhin

ABSTRACT Auklets (Aethia spp.) are small seabirds, endemic to the North Pacific Ocean, that nest in rock crevices on islands in Alaska and Russia. Nesting habitats for least (A. pusilla) and crested (A. cristatella) auklet colonies in the southern part of their range (Aleutian and Kuril Islands) are becoming overgrown by vegetation, which is fertilized by the auklets, making rock crevices unavailable for breeding. Colonization of newly created volcanic habitats suggests that auklets are habitat-limited in the southern range. The largest colonies there of least and crested auklets exist on lava slopes <100 years old. We propose that in the south, volcanic activity is required to maintain auklet populations. In contrast, colonies in the northern Bering Sea and Sea of Okhotsk show no indication of habitat limitation. They occur in more persistent talus slope habitats maintained by weathering, slumping, frost heaving, and tumbling. Biological processes there are slower and vegetation communities not as developed. We propose a conceptual model describing the interaction of geological and biological processes that influence auklet demography. We conclude that least and crested auklets require episodic disturbance (provided by volcanoes, earthquakes, and rock fall deposits) to maintain access to nest crevices. Auklets thereby provide an example of disturbance-adapted, early successional species that self-inhibit if their habitat is not regularly disturbed.


Global Change Biology | 2017

Circumpolar dynamics of a marine top-predator track ocean warming rates

Sébastien Descamps; Tycho Anker-Nilssen; Robert T. Barrett; David B. Irons; Flemming Merkel; Gregory J. Robertson; Nigel G. Yoccoz; Mark L. Mallory; William A. Montevecchi; David Boertmann; Yuri Artukhin; Signe Christensen-Dalsgaard; Kjell-Einar Erikstad; H. Grant Gilchrist; Aili L Labansen; Svein-Håkon Lorentsen; Anders Mosbech; Bergur Olsen; Aevar Petersen; Jean-François Rail; Heather M. Renner; Hallvard Strøm; Geir Helge Systad; Sabina Wilhelm; Larisa Zelenskaya

Abstract Global warming is a nonlinear process, and temperature may increase in a stepwise manner. Periods of abrupt warming can trigger persistent changes in the state of ecosystems, also called regime shifts. The responses of organisms to abrupt warming and associated regime shifts can be unlike responses to periods of slow or moderate change. Understanding of nonlinearity in the biological responses to climate warming is needed to assess the consequences of ongoing climate change. Here, we demonstrate that the population dynamics of a long‐lived, wide‐ranging marine predator are associated with changes in the rate of ocean warming. Data from 556 colonies of black‐legged kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla distributed throughout its breeding range revealed that an abrupt warming of sea‐surface temperature in the 1990s coincided with steep kittiwake population decline. Periods of moderate warming in sea temperatures did not seem to affect kittiwake dynamics. The rapid warming observed in the 1990s may have driven large‐scale, circumpolar marine ecosystem shifts that strongly affected kittiwakes through bottom‐up effects. Our study sheds light on the nonlinear response of a circumpolar seabird to large‐scale changes in oceanographic conditions and indicates that marine top predators may be more sensitive to the rate of ocean warming rather than to warming itself.


The Condor | 2014

Using patch occupancy models to estimate area of crevice-nesting seabird colonies

Joel H. Reynolds; Heather M. Renner

ABSTRACT Crevice-nesting seabirds are notoriously difficult to monitor. We present a survey design and analysis that estimates both colony area and geographic extent, using indirect evidence to determine whether a cell is “occupied.” The approach is to define a grid of cells across potential habitat and randomly sample small plots within each cell, surveying for signs of occupancy. Visiting ≥1 plot cell−1 provides a basis for mapping geographic extent. Occupancy models are used to estimate colony area, probability of detection for an occupied cell, and standard errors for all estimated parameters (allowing for statistical comparisons across surveys or colonies). We estimated the area of a colony of Least Auklets (Aethia pusilla) and Crested Auklets (A. cristatella) on Segula Island, Aleutian Archipelago, Alaska, in 2006, and use this as an example of how to adapt the survey design to the logistical constraints common in seabird colony surveys. Surveying only a handful of sample plots of ∼16 m2 in each ∼2,500-m2 cell in the grid was adequate to estimate the detection bias from spatial subsampling, correcting a >50% underestimate of colony area due to plots without evidence having been interpreted as unoccupied cells.


Fisheries Oceanography | 2005

Distribution patterns and population trends of breeding seabirds in the Aleutian Islands

G. Vernon Byrd; Heather M. Renner; Martin Renner


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2008

Responses of piscivorous seabirds at the Pribilof Islands to ocean climate

G. Vernon Byrd; William J. Sydeman; Heather M. Renner; Shoshiro Minobe


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2008

Contrasting population trends of piscivorous seabirds in the Pribilof Islands : A 30-year perspective

G. Vernon Byrd; Joel A. Schmutz; Heather M. Renner


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2012

Proximity to multiple foraging habitats enhances seabirds' resilience to local food shortages

Rosana Paredes; Ann M. A. Harding; David B. Irons; Daniel D. Roby; Robert M. Suryan; Rachael A. Orben; Heather M. Renner; Rebecca C. Young; Alexander S. Kitaysky


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2013

Does location really matter? An inter-colony comparison of seabirds breeding at varying distances from productive oceanographic features in the Bering Sea

Ann M. A. Harding; Rosana Paredes; Robert M. Suryan; Daniel D. Roby; David B. Irons; Rachael A. Orben; Heather M. Renner; Rebecca C. Young; Christopher P. Barger; Ine Dorresteijn; Alexander S. Kitaysky

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David B. Irons

United States Fish and Wildlife Service

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Alexander S. Kitaysky

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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Daniel D. Roby

United States Geological Survey

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G. Vernon Byrd

United States Fish and Wildlife Service

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Jeffrey C. Williams

United States Fish and Wildlife Service

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Rebecca C. Young

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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Joel H. Reynolds

United States Fish and Wildlife Service

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