1st Edition

Volume 1: Seabird Biodiversity and Human Activities

Edited By Jaime A. Ramos, Leonel Pereira Copyright 2022
    270 Pages 6 Color & 30 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    270 Pages 6 Color & 30 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    Seabirds are global travellers connecting oceans and seas all over the world, and facing multiple threats at local and global scales. Seabirds are long-lived top predators, reflecting changes at lower trophic levels, and are good models to assess ecological changes produced by human societies. Thus, world-wide collaborations are needed to understand seabird ecology and to develop effective conservation measures benefitting both humans and seabird populations.

    This book provides a modern overview on seabird biodiversity studies: it begins by covering the most up-to-date techniques to study seabirds, and then focus on pragmatic issues related with interactions between seabirds and humans, the use of seabirds as ecological indicators and conservation of seabirds. It gives an updated insight on all these topics and highlights gaps that need further development for a comprehensive understanding of the relationships between seabirds and human actions.

    This book covers the response of the seabird research community to a biodiversity crisis aiming to contribute towards environmental sustainability. It should provide inspiration to a wide range of professionals and students, including the much needed world-wide collaboration between research groups and practitioners. In this way seabird research and conservation provide an inspiration for the solution of global issues such as climate change.

    Part A: Techniques to Study Seabirds

    1. An Introduction to Seabirds and Their Study

    Marie Claire Gatt, José Pedro Granadeiro and Paulo Catry

    2. Conventional and Modern Approaches to Study Seabird Trophic Ecology and Diet

    Filipe R. Ceia, José C. Xavier, Ana R. Carreiro, Ivo dos Santos and Yves Cherel

    3. A Physiological Toolbox to Explore the Relationships Between Seabirds and Their Changing Environments

    Ana Cláudia Norte, Pedro Miguel M. Araújo and David Costantini

    4. Tracking Seabirds for Conservation and Marine Spatial Planning

    Jorge M. Pereira, Vitor H. Paiva, Lucas Krüger and Stephen C. Votier

    Part B: Seabirds Interacting with Human Activities and Infrastructures

    1. Seabird and Fisheries Interactions

    Nuno Oliveira, Jaime A. Ramos, Joana Gomes Calado and José Manuel Arcos

    2. Urban Gulls Living with Humans

    Joana Pais de Faria, Catarina S. Lopes, Edward Kroc, Louise K. Blight and Ruedi G. Nager

    3. Seabirds and Marine Renewable Energy Sources

    Andrew J.P. Harwood and Sue King

    4. Seabirds and Biotoxins

    María Victoria M. Casero, Jaime A. Ramos and Leonel Pereira

    Part C: Seabirds as Ecological Indicators

    1. Seabirds as Indicators of Forage Fish Stocks

    Jaime A. Ramos and Robert W. Furness

    2. Seabirds as Indicators of Oceanographic Changes

    Vitor H. Paiva

    3. Seabirds as Indicators of Metal and Plastic Pollution

    Catarina S. Lopes, Maria I. Laranjeiro, Jennifer L. Lavers, Annett Finger and Jennifer Provencher

    4. Antarctic Seabirds as Indicators of Climate Change

    José C. Xavier, Richard A. Phillips and Akinori Takahashi

    Part D: Actions for Seabird Conservation

    1. Light Pollution as a Seabirds’ Conservation Threat

    Cátia S.A. Gouveia

    2. Eradication and Control of Invasive Mammal Species as a Seabird Conservation Tool

    Paulo Oliveira, Félix M. Medina, Manuel Nogales and Pedro Luís Geraldes

    3. Identifying and Establishing Marine Protected Areas Worldwide: The Contribution of Seabird Data

    Lucas Krüger

    Biography

    Jaime A. Ramos is Associate Professor at Coimbra University, Portugal, where he teaches Conservation Biology and Ecology, and is a member of MARE, the Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre. He has worked with seabirds for over 25 years in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans and published over 200 papers in international journals. He leads a team of researchers and students using Conservation Physiology, Diet, Habitat Selection, and Movement Ecology to study the ecology of marine top predators for biodiversity conservation and environmental management.

    Leonel Pereira, the coordinator of the Aquatic Sciences Series to which this volume belongs to, has a PhD in Biology by the University of Coimbra, Portugal, where he currently lectures. He is also an Investigator integrated in MARE, the Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre. His interests are mainly focused on Marine Biodiversity, Marine Biotechnology and Marine Ecology (environmental assessment). He has authored/edited more than 40 books and book chapters, and published more than 100 scientific papers in international journals.