Cape cormorants decrease, move east and adapt foraging strategies following eastward displacement of their main prey

Article

Cape cormorants decrease, move east and adapt foraging strategies following eastward displacement of their main prey

Published in: African Journal of Marine Science
Volume 38 , issue 3 , 2016 , pages: 373–383
DOI: 10.2989/1814232X.2016.1202861
Author(s): RJM Crawford Branch: Oceans & Coasts, Department of Environmental Affairs, South Africa , RM Randall South African National Parks, South Africa , TR Cook Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology, DST-NRF Centre of Excellence, South Africa , PG Ryan Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology, DST-NRF Centre of Excellence, South Africa , BM Dyer Branch: Oceans & Coasts, Department of Environmental Affairs, South Africa , R Fox Addo Elephant National Park, South African National Parks, South Africa , D Geldenhuys CapeNature, Voëlklip, South Africa , J Huisamen CapeNature, Voëlklip, South Africa , C McGeorge CapeNature, Voëlklip, South Africa , MK Smith South African National Parks, South Africa , L Upfold Branch: Oceans & Coasts, Department of Environmental Affairs, South Africa , J Visagie CapeNature, Scientific Services, Assegaaibosch Nature Reserve, South Africa , LJ Waller CapeNature, Voëlklip, South Africa , PA Whittington Department of Zoology, South Africa , CG Wilke Branch: Fisheries Management, Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, South Africa , AB Makhado Branch: Oceans & Coasts, Department of Environmental Affairs, South Africa

Abstract

Numbers of Cape cormorants Phalacrocorax capensis breeding in South Africa decreased by nearly 50% from approximately 107 000 pairs in 1977–1981 to 57 000 pairs in 2010–2014. Although four colonies had >10 000 pairs in 1977–1981, there was just one such colony in 2010–2014. Almost all the decrease occurred after the early 1990s off north-west South Africa, between the Orange River estuary and Dassen Island. South of this, the number breeding in the two periods was stable, with some colonies being formed or growing rapidly in the 2000s. The proportion of South Africa’s Cape cormorants that bred south of Dassen Island increased from 35% in 1977–1981 to 66% in 2010–2014, with the opposite situation observed in the north-west. This matched a shift to the south and east in the distributions of two of the Cape cormorant’s main prey species, anchovy Engraulis encrasicolus and sardine Sardinops sagax. In 2014, an apparent scarcity of prey in the north-west resulted in Cape cormorants attempting to take bait from hooks of fishing lines over an extended period, a behaviour not previously recorded. The number of Cape cormorants breeding in the south may be constrained by the absence of large islands between Dyer Island in the west and Algoa Bay in the east. If so, it may be possible to bolster the southern population through the provision of appropriate breeding habitat, such as platforms, or restricting human disturbance at suitable mainland cliff breeding sites.

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