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Dive into the research topics where Thomas I. Van Pelt is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas I. Van Pelt.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology | 1997

Proximate composition and energy density of some north pacific forage fishes

Thomas I. Van Pelt; John F. Piatt; Brain K. Lance; Daniel D. Roby

Abstract Mature pelagic forage fish species (capelin, sand lance, squid) had greater lipid concentrations than juvenile age-classes of large demersal and pelagic fish species (walleye pollock, Pacific cod, Atka mackerel, greenling, prowfish, rockfish, sablefish). Myctophids preyed on by puffins have at least twice as much lipid per gram compared to mature capelin, sand lance and squid, and an order of magnitude greater lipid concentrations than juvenile forage fish. Energy density of forage fishes was positively correlated with lipid content, and negatively correlated with water, ash-free lean dry mass (mostly protein), and ash contents.


Ecology | 2007

Prey density and the behavioral flexibility of a marine predator: The common murre ( Uria aalge )

Ann M. A. Harding; John F. Piatt; Joel A. Schmutz; Michael T. Shultz; Thomas I. Van Pelt; Arthur B. Kettle; Suzann G. Speckman

Flexible time budgets allow individual animals to buffer the effects of variable food availability by allocating more time to foraging when food density decreases. This trait should be especially important for marine predators that forage on patchy and ephemeral food resources. We examined flexible time allocation by a long-lived marine predator, the Common Murre (Uria aalge), using data collected in a five-year study at three colonies in Alaska (USA) with contrasting environmental conditions. Annual hydroacoustic surveys revealed an order-of-magnitude variation in food density among the 15 colony-years of study. We used data on parental time budgets and local prey density to test predictions from two hypotheses: Hypothesis A, the colony attendance of seabirds varies nonlinearly with food density; and Hypothesis B, flexible time allocation of parent murres buffers chicks against variable food availability. Hypothesis A was supported; colony attendance by murres was positively correlated with food over a limited range of poor-to-moderate food densities, but independent of food over a broader range of higher densities. This is the first empirical evidence for a nonlinear response of a marine predators time budget to changes in prey density. Predictions from Hypothesis B were largely supported: (1) chick-feeding rates were fairly constant over a wide range of densities and only dropped below 3.5 meals per day at the low end of prey density, and (2) there was a nonlinear relationship between chick-feeding rates and time spent at the colony, with chick-feeding rates only declining after time at the colony by the nonbrooding parent was reduced to a minimum. The ability of parents to adjust their foraging time by more than 2 h/d explains why they were able to maintain chick-feeding rates of more than 3.5 meals/d across a 10-fold range in local food density.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 1997

Mass-mortality of guillemots (Uria aalge) in the Gulf of Alaska in 1993

John F. Piatt; Thomas I. Van Pelt

Abstract During the first six months of 1993, about 3500 dead and moribund guillemots (Uria aalge) were observed throughout the northern Gulf of Alaska coast (ca 1800 km range). Mortality peaked during March. Highest numbers were observed in western Prince William Sound and along the south coast of the Kenai Peninsula. Large flocks of live guillemots gathered in nearshore waters, in contrast to most winters when guillemots reside offshore. Most guillemots recovered were extremely emaciated (ca 60% of normal weight) and sub-adult (80%). Based on carcass deposition and persistence experiments, we calculate that about 10 900 birds eventually came ashore on beaches that were surveyed. Even if most birds killed made it to shore, only a fraction of beaches in the Gulf of Alaska were surveyed and we estimate that a minimum total of 120 000 guillemots died. Results of other investigations on potential causes of mortality (biotoxins, pathogens, parasites, metals, etc.) were either negative or inconclusive, and necropsies lead us to believe that starvation was the proximate cause of death. Reduced food availability could have been related to anomalous sea conditions found during the prolonged 1990–1995 El Nino-Southern Oscillation event.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 1995

Deposition and persistence of beachcast seabird carcasses

Thomas I. Van Pelt; John F. Piatt

Following a massive wreck of guillemots (Uria aalge) in late winter and spring of 1993, we monitored the deposition and subsequent disappearance of 398 beachcast guillemot carcasses on two beaches in Resurrection Bay, Alaska, during a 100 day period. Deposition of carcasses declined logarithmically with time after the original event. Since fresh carcasses were more likely to be removed between counts than older carcasses, persistence rates increased logarithmically over time. Scavenging appeared to be the primary cause of carcass removal, followed by burial in beach debris and sand. Along-shore transport was negligible. We present an equation which estimates the number of carcasses deposited at time zero from beach surveys conducted some time later, using non-linear persistence rates that are a function of time. We use deposition rates to model the accumulation of beached carcasses, accounting for further deposition subsequent to the original event. Finally, we present a general method for extrapolating from a single count the number of carcasses cumulatively deposited on surveyed beaches, and discuss how our results can be used to assess the magnitude of mass seabird mortality events from beach surveys.


The Condor | 2002

REDUCTION OF PROVISIONING EFFORT IN RESPONSE TO EXPERIMENTAL MANIPULATION OF CHICK NUTRITIONAL STATUS IN THE HORNED PUFFIN

Ann M. A. Harding; Thomas I. Van Pelt; John F. Piatt; Alexander S. Kitaysky

Abstract Using a supplemental feeding experiment, we investigated the ability of adult Horned Puffins to decrease provisioning effort in response to reduced nutritional requirements of chicks. We found no difference between experimental and control groups in parental provisioning before supplementary feeding was initiated. After receiving supplemental food for seven days, experimental chicks grew faster, gained more mass and received 87% less food from their parents than did control chicks. These results demonstrate that Horned Puffin parents can decrease food provisioning in response to a decrease in their chick nutritional requirements. Reducción del Esfuerzo de Aprovisionamiento en Respuesta a la Manipulación Experimental del Estatus Nutricional de Pichones en Fratercula corniculata Resumen. Usando un experimento de suplementación alimenticia, investigamos la habilidad de adultos de Fratercula corniculata de disminuir el esfuerzo de aprovisionamiento en respuesta a una reducción en la demanda nutricional de los pichones. No encontramos diferencias entre grupos experimentales y control en el aprovisionamiento parental antes que la suplementación de alimento fuera iniciada. Luego de que los pichones recibieron comida adicional durante siete días, los pichones experimentales crecieron más rápido, ganaron más peso y recibieron 87% menos alimento de sus padres que los pichones control. Estos resultados demuestran que los padres de F. corniculata pueden disminuir el aprovisionamiento en respuesta a una reducción en los requerimientos nutricionales de sus pichones.


Northwestern Naturalist | 1999

Discovery of a new Kittlitz's murrelet nest: Clues to habitat selection and nest-site fidelity

John F. Piatt; Nancy L. Naslund; Thomas I. Van Pelt

On 13 June 1993, a new Kittlitzs murrelet (Brachyramphus brevirostris) nest was discovered near Red Mountain on the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska. The nest was on a 22° slope at about 900 m elevation with a northeast aspect, and contained a 60.2 x 40.6 mm egg that weighed 49.0 g. Downy feathers and weathered fecal material found at the nest indicated re-use from a previous year, suggesting possible nest site fidelity. The nest was located in an area scoured by winds and free of snow during early spring, suggesting that this may be an important mesoscale factor influencing selection of nesting habitat. Proximity to suitable foraging habitat, particularly sheltered bays and glacial river outflows, may affect breeding habitat choice over larger spatial scales.


The Condor | 1999

Vocalizations of the Kittlitz's murrelet

Thomas I. Van Pelt; John F. Piatt; Gustaaf B. van Vliet

We present the first documentation of Kittlitzs Murrelet (Brachyramphus brevirostris) vocalizations, based on recordings made in Glacier Bay, Alaska, in 1994. We identified two apparently related types of calls: groan and quack. The Kittlitzs Murrelet calls were markedly different from the most common calls of the congeneric Marbled Murrelet (Brachyramphus marmoratus), but shared characteristics with the Marbled Murrelets less common groan call. Phylogeny, breeding biology, and habitat characteristics may explain relationships between the congeneric vocalizations. More complete knowledge of the Kittlitzs Murrelet vocal repertoire is needed before vocalizations can be either used or discarded in the design of effective programs to monitor this rare and poorly-known species.


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2007

Seabirds as indicators of marine food supplies: Cairns revisited

John F. Piatt; Ann M. A. Harding; Michael T. Shultz; Suzann G. Speckman; Thomas I. Van Pelt; Gary S. Drew; Arthur B. Kettle


Ibis | 2004

Sex differences in Little Auk Alle alle parental care: transition from biparental to paternal-only care

Ann M. A. Harding; Thomas I. Van Pelt; Jan T. Lifjeld; Fridtjof Mehlum


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2009

Timing of breeding and reproductive performance in murres and kittiwakes reflect mismatched seasonal prey dynamics

Michael T. Shultz; John F. Piatt; Ann M. A. Harding; Arthur B. Kettle; Thomas I. Van Pelt

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John F. Piatt

United States Geological Survey

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Michael T. Shultz

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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Arthur B. Kettle

United States Fish and Wildlife Service

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Alexander S. Kitaysky

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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Gary S. Drew

United States Geological Survey

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Jan T. Lifjeld

American Museum of Natural History

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Marc D. Romano

United States Geological Survey

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Mayumi L. Arimitsu

United States Geological Survey

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