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Featured researches published by Knud Falk.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2014

Prevalence of marine debris in marine birds from the North Atlantic.

Jennifer F. Provencher; Alexander L. Bond; April Hedd; William A. Montevecchi; Sabir Bin Muzaffar; Sarah J. Courchesne; H. Grant Gilchrist; Sarah E. Jamieson; Flemming Merkel; Knud Falk; Jan Durinck; Mark L. Mallory

Marine birds have been found to ingest plastic debris in many of the worlds oceans. Plastic accumulation data from necropsies findings and regurgitation studies are presented on 13 species of marine birds in the North Atlantic, from Georgia, USA to Nunavut, Canada and east to southwest Greenland and the Norwegian Sea. Of the species examined, the two surface plungers (great shearwaters Puffinus gravis; northern fulmars Fulmarus glacialis) had the highest prevalence of ingested plastic (71% and 51%, respectively). Great shearwaters also had the most pieces of plastics in their stomachs, with some individuals containing as many of 36 items. Seven species contained no evidence of plastic debris. Reporting of baseline data as done here is needed to ensure that data are available for marine birds over time and space scales in which we see changes in historical debris patterns in marine environments (i.e. decades) and among oceanographic regions.


Polar Biology | 2002

Diving behaviour differs between incubating and brooding Brünnich's guillemots, Uria lomvia

Silvano Benvenuti; Luigi Dall'Antonia; Knud Falk

Abstract. Bird-borne data loggers were used to investigate the foraging strategies of Brünnichs guillemots breeding in a colony in the North Water Polynya: the flight performance and diving activity of incubating birds were compared to those of chick-rearing individuals. No significant differences were recorded between the bird groups in the potential foraging range. Conversely, clear differences were revealed between incubating and chick-rearing birds in diving behaviour. Chick-rearing birds were generally foraging at a significantly greater depth, and spent significantly higher proportions of the time submerged, than brooding individuals. Despite these differences, the estimated average daily energy expenditure of chick-rearing Brünnichs guillemots was only about 6% higher than that during incubation.


The Condor | 2002

ISOTOPIC INVESTIGATIONS OF SEABIRDS OF THE NORTH WATER POLYNYA: CONTRASTING TROPHIC RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN THE EASTERN AND WESTERN SECTORS

Keith A. Hobson; Grant Gilchrist; Knud Falk

Abstract We used δ15N and δ13C analyses of blood, muscle, and liver tissues to evaluate similarity of diet among five seabird species: Black Guillemot (Cepphus grylle), Black-legged Kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla), Dovekie (Alle alle), Glaucous Gull (Larus hyperboreus), and Thick-billed Murre (Uria lomvia) nesting at Coburg Island on the west and Hakluyt Island on the east side of the North Water Polynya between Ellesmere Island, Canada, and northwest Greenland. We hypothesized that dietary differences should occur because the two neighboring sites are subject to different oceanographic conditions, one result of which is differential timing of spring open water. Relative trophic level, derived from tissue δ15N values, ranged from 3.6 for Dovekie from Hakluyt Island to 4.7 for late-breeding-season diets of Thick-billed Murre adults from Coburg Island. At Coburg Island, trophic level of hatching year (HY) kittiwakes, murres, and Glaucous Gulls was higher than that for adults. This pattern was not found at Hakluyt Island, where chicks of all species generally occupied lower trophic positions. These findings suggest that lower-trophic-level prey were more important to Hakluyt Island seabirds, possibly due to lower availability of arctic cod (Boreogadus saida). Investigaciones Isotópicas de Aves Marinas en el Canal Aguas del Norte: Contrastando las Relaciones Tróficas entre los Sectores Este y Oeste Resumen. Usamos análisis de δ15N y δ13C en tejidos sanguineos, musculares y hepáticos para evaluar la similitud en la dieta entre cinco especies de aves marinas (Cepphus grylle, Rissa tridactyla, Alle alle, Larus hyperboreus y Uria lomvia). Estas especies anidan en la Isla Coburg en el lado oeste y en la Isla Hakluyt en el lado este del Canal de las Aguas del Norte, que se presenta libre de hielos y está situado entre la Isla Ellesmere en Canadá y el noroeste de Groenlandia. Hipotetizamos que las diferencias en la dieta se deberían a que los dos sitios vecinos están sujetos a diferentes condiciones oceanográficas, resultando en un ajuste temporal diferencial en la apertura de las aguas en primavera. El nivel trófico relativo, derivado de los valores de δ15N en los tejidos, fluctuó entre 3.6 para A. alle de la Isla Hakluyt hasta 4.7 para la dieta del final de la época reproductiva de adultos de U. lomvia de la Isla Coburg. En la Isla Coburg, el nivel trófico de individuos de R. tridactyla, U. lomvia y L. hyperboreus que eclosionaron ese año fue mayor que el nivel de los adultos. No encontramos este patrón en la Isla Hakluyt, donde los pichones de todas las especies generalmente ocuparon posiciones tróficas inferiores. Estos resultados sugieren que las presas de niveles tróficos inferiores fueron más importantes para las aves marinas de la Isla Hakluyt, posiblemente debido a una menor disponibilidad de bacalao del Ártico (Boreogadus saida).


Polar Biology | 2006

The diet of common eiders wintering in Nuuk, Southwest Greenland

Flemming Merkel; Sarah E. Jamieson; Knud Falk; Anders Mosbech

Southwest Greenland provides wintering grounds for 70% (∼460,000) of the northern common eider (Somateria mollissima borealis) population. From 241 gullet samples (esophagus and proventriculus content) collected over three winters (1999–2002) near Nuuk, we identified 39 species consumed by the eiders. In contrast to studies elsewhere, fresh mass of the diet was dominated by soft-bottom species: the bivalve Mya eideri (32.8%) and the polychaete Pectinaria spp. (24.2%). The hard-bottom blue mussel (Mytilus edulis), usually the dominant prey of common eiders, was only the fourth most important diet species (7.5%). Overall, bivalves accounted for 56% of the diet. Twenty-seven prey species were minor foods with aggregate fresh mass of only 5.5%. Diets of males and females were similar, whereas juveniles consumed greater mass of crustaceans and less of bivalves. Diet diversity was higher in mid-winter than late winter, and higher in coastal habitats than in fjords. Within one important wintering area the results indicate that optimal size of blue mussels may be depleted over winter.


The Auk | 2000

Measurements of Diving Depth in Dovekies (Alle alle)

Knud Falk; Carsten Egevang Pedersen; Kaj Kampp

Diving seabirds have a three-dimensional foraging habitat, and maximum diving depth is important in defining habitat availability for each species. Therefore, measurements of dive depths and profiles are significant components in many studies of seabird foraging ecology (Burger 1991, Burger et al. 1993, Wilson 1995, Gaston and Jones 1998). The Dovekie (Alle alle) is the most abundant seabird that breeds in the high-arctic region of the Atlantic, where it feeds chiefly on small zooplankton (Roby et al. 1981, Bradstreet 1982) that are caught by wing-propelled iving. The actual diving depths reached by foraging Dovekies have not been measured, and apart from indirect evidence, such as dive duration or projec-


Environment International | 2009

Persistent organochlorine compounds in peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus) eggs from South Greenland: levels and temporal changes between 1986 and 2003.

Katrin Vorkamp; Marianne Thomsen; Søren Møller; Knud Falk; Peter Sørensen

Thirty-seven addled peregrine falcon eggs collected in South Greenland between 1986 and 2003 were analysed for their content of the organochlorine compounds polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), dichlorodiphenyl tricloroethane (DDT) and its degradation products, hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH) isomers and hexachlorobenzene (HCB). PCBs and DDT (including metabolites) were by far the most abundant OC groups, with median concentrations of 55 and 40 microg/g lw, respectively. The concentrations were high in an Arctic context, but similar to previously reported levels from Alaska and Norway and slightly lower than concentrations measured in eggs from industrialised regions. Geographical differences may be of importance, considering the migration of peregrine falcons and their prey. SigmaHCH and HCB had median concentrations of 0.39 and 0.17 microg/g lw, respectively. On average, DDE accounted for 97% of SigmaDDT, but was below critical levels for eggshell thinning. All compound groups showed a weak decreasing trend over the study period, which was statistically significant for HCB and close to being significant for SigmaHCH. The weak decrease of SigmaPCB and SigmaDDT is different from other time trend studies from Greenland, usually showing a more pronounced decrease in the beginning of the study period, followed by a certain stabilisation in recent years.


Polar Biology | 2007

The diet of king eiders wintering in Nuuk, Southwest Greenland, with reference to sympatric wintering common eiders

Flemming Merkel; Anders Mosbech; Sarah E. Jamieson; Knud Falk

Coastal and offshore waters of Southwest Greenland are internationally important wintering areas for king eiders (Somateria spectabilis) breeding in eastern Canadian Arctic and in northwestern Greenland. This paper presents the first assessment of their winter diet. Based on esophageal-proventricular samples from 26 females (13 juveniles and 13 older birds) and 15 males (11 juveniles and four older birds) collected in 2000–2002 (November–May) in coastal waters of Nuuk, we identified 28 prey species. The diet consisted of almost equal proportions (aggregate fresh mass) of polychaetes, echinoderms, crustaceans and molluscs. The dominant prey species were Pectinaria spp. (26.8%), Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis (18.4%), Mya eideri (11.2%) and Hyas araneus (9.7%). The polychaetes have previously been identified as important prey for eiders in Greenland, but apparently not outside Greenland. Compared with a diet study of common eiders Somateria mollissima from the same wintering area, the king eiders consumed significantly less bivalves and significantly more echinoderms. This difference corresponded with observations that common eiders were feeding in shallow waters, while king eiders were feeding in deeper waters farther from the shore. Benthic surveys are needed to confirm that diet corresponds with prey availability.


Polar Biology | 2000

Breeding density and population of little auks (Alle alle) in a Northwest Greenland colony

Kaj Kampp; Knud Falk; Carsten Egevang Pedersen

Abstract The little auk population of the Thule district in Greenland is generally believed to be the largest anywhere and to comprise more than half of the world population, although published numbers have largely been conjectural. In 1996/1997 we estimated breeding density of little auks at Hakluyt Island in this district by colour-marking a number of birds in three study plots and subsequently counting marked and unmarked birds present in the plots. The density estimate considered most representative of the colony was 1.8 birds/m2 or 0.73 pairs/m2 (±7%). From surveys of the inhabitated area of the scree slopes, this density implies a total little auk population for the island of 130,000 pairs. An extrapolation to the entire Thule district suggests a population in the area of at least 15 million pairs, which is in general agreement with previously published assumptions.


Wildlife Biology | 2006

An evaluation of methods used to estimate carcass composition of common eiders Somateria mollissima

Sarah E. Jamieson; H. Grant Gilchrist; Flemming Merkel; Knud Falk; Antony W. Diamond

Abstract To examine how endogenous reserves may influence avian life history, it is often necessary to quantify carcass composition. However, proximate analyses are expensive, time-consuming and difficult to perform under field conditions. Consequently, carcass composition is often estimated from easily measured data. We evaluate methods of estimating carcass composition of the common eider duck Somateria mollissima. We measured, dissected and completed proximate analyses of 92 eiders. Predictive models were derived using multiple regressions of 70 birds, while the remaining 22 were used as an independent test of the models. Each models accuracy was evaluated by comparing estimates against known values of protein and lipids, using root mean square error (RMSE). Abdominal and leg fat pad mass were highly correlated with total lipid (r = 0.92), and body mass was highly correlated with total protein (r = 0.80). Models that used body mass, fat depots and/or muscle group data were the most accurate (lipids adjusted R2 = 0.93, RMSE = 14.60; protein adjusted R2 = 0.74, RMSE = 11.14). By using these equations it is possible, using dissection data, to accurately estimate carcass composition of eiders. If dissection data are not available, one can still estimate carcass composition using equations that require only morphometrics although in our lipid analysis such equations had relatively low accuracy (lipids adjusted R2 = 0.54, RMSE = 32.74).


Polar Biology | 2006

Endogenous reserve dynamics of northern common eiders wintering in Greenland

Sarah E. Jamieson; H. Grant Gilchrist; Flemming Merkel; Antony W. Diamond; Knud Falk

Endogenous reserves influence both survival and reproduction of many waterfowl species, but little is known about reserve levels of most species during the nonbreeding season, particularly those wintering at high latitudes. We investigated whether age, sex, and season were related to carcass composition of northern common eiders (Somateria mollissima borealis) wintering in southwest Greenland during 1999–2002. Adults carried more lipid and protein than juveniles during all winters. Among both age classes, males and females had similar fat levels but males carried slightly more protein. There was no dramatic seasonal variation in lipid or protein content. This suggests that during the period of this study, these eiders did not experience large-scale nutritional shortfalls. As predicted, Greenlandic eiders carried more lipid reserves than eider populations wintering in more temperate environments. Contrary to prediction, there was little relation between reserve levels and photoperiod, ambient temperature, or hunting disturbance intensity. Our results suggest that both sexes are equally capable of dealing with nutritional deficits, and that juvenile birds are more prone to nutritional stress as evidenced by their consistently poorer body condition.

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Kaj Kampp

University of Copenhagen

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Sarah E. Jamieson

Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa

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