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Wind, Waves, and Wing Loading: Morphological Specialization May Limit Range Expansion of Endangered Albatrosses

Among the varied adaptations for avian flight, the morphological traits allowing large-bodied albatrosses to capitalize on wind and wave energy for efficient long-distance flight are unparalleled. Consequently, the biogeographic distribution of most albatrosses is limited to the windiest oceanic reg...

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Autores principales: Suryan, Robert M., Anderson, David J., Shaffer, Scott A., Roby, Daniel D., Tremblay, Yann, Costa, Daniel P., Sievert, Paul R., Sato, Fumio, Ozaki, Kiyoaki, Balogh, Gregory R., Nakamura, Noboru
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2602987/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19107200
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004016
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author Suryan, Robert M.
Anderson, David J.
Shaffer, Scott A.
Roby, Daniel D.
Tremblay, Yann
Costa, Daniel P.
Sievert, Paul R.
Sato, Fumio
Ozaki, Kiyoaki
Balogh, Gregory R.
Nakamura, Noboru
author_facet Suryan, Robert M.
Anderson, David J.
Shaffer, Scott A.
Roby, Daniel D.
Tremblay, Yann
Costa, Daniel P.
Sievert, Paul R.
Sato, Fumio
Ozaki, Kiyoaki
Balogh, Gregory R.
Nakamura, Noboru
author_sort Suryan, Robert M.
collection PubMed
description Among the varied adaptations for avian flight, the morphological traits allowing large-bodied albatrosses to capitalize on wind and wave energy for efficient long-distance flight are unparalleled. Consequently, the biogeographic distribution of most albatrosses is limited to the windiest oceanic regions on earth; however, exceptions exist. Species breeding in the North and Central Pacific Ocean (Phoebastria spp.) inhabit regions of lower wind speed and wave height than southern hemisphere genera, and have large intrageneric variation in body size and aerodynamic performance. Here, we test the hypothesis that regional wind and wave regimes explain observed differences in Phoebastria albatross morphology and we compare their aerodynamic performance to representatives from the other three genera of this globally distributed avian family. In the North and Central Pacific, two species (short-tailed P. albatrus and waved P. irrorata) are markedly larger, yet have the smallest breeding ranges near highly productive coastal upwelling systems. Short-tailed albatrosses, however, have 60% higher wing loading (weight per area of lift) compared to waved albatrosses. Indeed, calculated aerodynamic performance of waved albatrosses, the only tropical albatross species, is more similar to those of their smaller congeners (black-footed P. nigripes and Laysan P. immutabilis), which have relatively low wing loading and much larger foraging ranges that include central oceanic gyres of relatively low productivity. Globally, the aerodynamic performance of short-tailed and waved albatrosses are most anomalous for their body sizes, yet consistent with wind regimes within their breeding season foraging ranges. Our results are the first to integrate global wind and wave patterns with albatross aerodynamics, thereby identifying morphological specialization that may explain limited breeding ranges of two endangered albatross species. These results are further relevant to understanding past and potentially predicting future distributional limits of albatrosses globally, particularly with respect to climate change effects on basin-scale and regional wind fields.
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spelling pubmed-26029872008-12-24 Wind, Waves, and Wing Loading: Morphological Specialization May Limit Range Expansion of Endangered Albatrosses Suryan, Robert M. Anderson, David J. Shaffer, Scott A. Roby, Daniel D. Tremblay, Yann Costa, Daniel P. Sievert, Paul R. Sato, Fumio Ozaki, Kiyoaki Balogh, Gregory R. Nakamura, Noboru PLoS One Research Article Among the varied adaptations for avian flight, the morphological traits allowing large-bodied albatrosses to capitalize on wind and wave energy for efficient long-distance flight are unparalleled. Consequently, the biogeographic distribution of most albatrosses is limited to the windiest oceanic regions on earth; however, exceptions exist. Species breeding in the North and Central Pacific Ocean (Phoebastria spp.) inhabit regions of lower wind speed and wave height than southern hemisphere genera, and have large intrageneric variation in body size and aerodynamic performance. Here, we test the hypothesis that regional wind and wave regimes explain observed differences in Phoebastria albatross morphology and we compare their aerodynamic performance to representatives from the other three genera of this globally distributed avian family. In the North and Central Pacific, two species (short-tailed P. albatrus and waved P. irrorata) are markedly larger, yet have the smallest breeding ranges near highly productive coastal upwelling systems. Short-tailed albatrosses, however, have 60% higher wing loading (weight per area of lift) compared to waved albatrosses. Indeed, calculated aerodynamic performance of waved albatrosses, the only tropical albatross species, is more similar to those of their smaller congeners (black-footed P. nigripes and Laysan P. immutabilis), which have relatively low wing loading and much larger foraging ranges that include central oceanic gyres of relatively low productivity. Globally, the aerodynamic performance of short-tailed and waved albatrosses are most anomalous for their body sizes, yet consistent with wind regimes within their breeding season foraging ranges. Our results are the first to integrate global wind and wave patterns with albatross aerodynamics, thereby identifying morphological specialization that may explain limited breeding ranges of two endangered albatross species. These results are further relevant to understanding past and potentially predicting future distributional limits of albatrosses globally, particularly with respect to climate change effects on basin-scale and regional wind fields. Public Library of Science 2008-12-24 /pmc/articles/PMC2602987/ /pubmed/19107200 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004016 Text en This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Suryan, Robert M.
Anderson, David J.
Shaffer, Scott A.
Roby, Daniel D.
Tremblay, Yann
Costa, Daniel P.
Sievert, Paul R.
Sato, Fumio
Ozaki, Kiyoaki
Balogh, Gregory R.
Nakamura, Noboru
Wind, Waves, and Wing Loading: Morphological Specialization May Limit Range Expansion of Endangered Albatrosses
title Wind, Waves, and Wing Loading: Morphological Specialization May Limit Range Expansion of Endangered Albatrosses
title_full Wind, Waves, and Wing Loading: Morphological Specialization May Limit Range Expansion of Endangered Albatrosses
title_fullStr Wind, Waves, and Wing Loading: Morphological Specialization May Limit Range Expansion of Endangered Albatrosses
title_full_unstemmed Wind, Waves, and Wing Loading: Morphological Specialization May Limit Range Expansion of Endangered Albatrosses
title_short Wind, Waves, and Wing Loading: Morphological Specialization May Limit Range Expansion of Endangered Albatrosses
title_sort wind, waves, and wing loading: morphological specialization may limit range expansion of endangered albatrosses
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2602987/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19107200
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004016
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