Migration, Homing, and Mortality of Breeding Female Eiders Somateria mollissima dresseri of the St. Lawrence Estuary, Quebec

1975 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Austin Reed

2011 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 124-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hélène Diéval ◽  
Jean-François Giroux ◽  
Jean-Pierre L. Savard


1980 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 583-588 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Bédard ◽  
J. C. Therriault ◽  
J. Bérubé

Feeding and excretion rates of the herring, great black-backed, and ring-billed gulls (Larus argentatus, L. marinus, and L. delawarensis), and of the common eider (Somateria mollissima) were measured in captive individuals and the concentration of soluble nutrients in their excreta was established.The bird population in a 30.6-km2 coastal study area varied between 2500 and 12 500 individuals between early May and mid-November. These birds excreted a seasonal total of 5.8, 4.2, and 48.1 kg-at. of soluble silicate, phosphate, and nitrogenous compounds, respectively. Such quantities, when introduced in the nutrient budget of the coastal area studied, are found to be negligible, considering the levels of nutrients generally recorded in these waters on the one hand, and the relative importance of alternate sources such as land drainage and vertical mixing on the other. Thus, the seabirds can hardly be viewed, except perhaps under the most special circumstances, as important agents in the dynamic nutrient regeneration processes of marine coastal waters of the St. Lawrence Estuary.Key words: nutrient recycling, seabirds, St. Lawrence Estuary



1974 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 319-334 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Cantin ◽  
J. Bédard ◽  
H. Milne

The study was conducted in the St. Lawrence estuary during 1969 and 1970. The food abundance in the intertidal zone was measured in four Sampling stations located on the south shore of the river; the measurements revealed that over 95% of the available food of the common eider (Somateria mollissima) consisted of Littorina spp., Mytilus edulis, and Gammarus oceanicus. Both adult and young birds showed a distinct rhythm of feeding activities associated with tidal level. During the prenesting period, herring eggs and Nereis virens made up most of the food of adult common eiders. When accompanying ducklings, females ate mostly Littorina spp. and amphipods. Littorina spp. made up between 30 and 97% of the diet of the ducklings, the importance of this gastropod growing with age of the bird. Energy requirements during maximum growth were evaluated at about 460 kcal/bird per day on ducklings (age 54 days) fed natural foods, while between week 3 and week 8 it stood at about 520 kcal/bird per day in ducklings fed "turkey starter." These figures were used to assess the importance of the food removed by the eiders from the intertidal zone during the summer. We conclude that between 10 and 30% (according to the area) of the standing-crop biomass of Littorina alone (in July) is removed by the ducklings and the females accompanying them. At various moments through the season, these birds remove between 40 and 100 metric tons of mollusks per day from the intertidal zone.



2013 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 7609-7622 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Alkhatib ◽  
P. A. del Giorgio ◽  
Y. Gelinas ◽  
M. F. Lehmann

Abstract. The distribution of dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) and carbon (DOC) in sediment porewaters was determined at nine locations along the St. Lawrence estuary and in the gulf of St. Lawrence. In a previous manuscript (Alkhatib et al., 2012a), we have shown that this study area is characterized by gradients in the sedimentary particulate organic matter (POM) reactivity, bottom water oxygen concentrations, and benthic respiration rates. Based on the porewater profiles, we estimated the benthic diffusive fluxes of DON and DOC in the same area. Our results show that DON fluxed out of the sediments at significant rates (110 to 430 μmol m−2 d−1). DON fluxes were positively correlated with sedimentary POM reactivity and varied inversely with sediment oxygen exposure time (OET), suggesting direct links between POM quality, aerobic remineralization and the release of DON to the water column. DON fluxes were on the order of 30 to 64% of the total benthic inorganic fixed N loss due to denitrification, and often exceeded the diffusive nitrate fluxes into the sediments. Hence they represented a large fraction of the total benthic N exchange, a result that is particularly important in light of the fact that DON fluxes are usually not accounted for in estuarine and coastal zone nutrient budgets. In contrast to DON, DOC fluxes out of the sediments did not show any significant spatial variation along the Laurentian Channel (LC) between the estuary and the gulf (2100 ± 100 μmol m−2 d−1). The molar C / N ratio of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in porewater and the overlying bottom water varied significantly along the transect, with lowest C / N in the lower estuary (5–6) and highest C / N (> 10) in the gulf. Large differences between the C / N ratios of porewater DOM and POM are mainly attributed to a combination of selective POM hydrolysis and elemental fractionation during subsequent DOM mineralization, but selective adsorption of DOM to mineral phases could not be excluded as a potential C / N fractionating process. The extent of this C- versus N- element partitioning seems to be linked to POM reactivity and redox conditions in the sediment porewaters. Our results thus highlight the variable effects selective organic matter (OM) preservation can have on bulk sedimentary C / N ratios, decoupling the primary source C / N signatures from those in sedimentary paleoenvironmental archives. Our study further underscores that the role of estuarine sediments as efficient sinks of bioavailable nitrogen is strongly influenced by the release of DON during early diagenetic reactions, and that DON fluxes from continental margin sediments represent an important internal source of N to the ocean.



2021 ◽  
Vol 166 ◽  
pp. 112180
Author(s):  
Michael Zuykov ◽  
Galina Kolyuchkina ◽  
Graeme Spiers ◽  
Michel Gosselin ◽  
Philippe Archambault ◽  
...  


Author(s):  
Yves Paradis ◽  
Marc Pépino ◽  
Simon Bernatchez ◽  
Denis Fournier ◽  
Léon L’Italien ◽  
...  




1984 ◽  
Vol 62 (4) ◽  
pp. 778-794 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher S. Lobban

From a study of living materials and specimens in several regional herbaria, a list has been drawn up of all the common and several of the rarer tube-dwelling diatoms of eastern Canada. Descriptions, illustrations of living material and acid-cleaned valves, and a key to the species are provided. Most specimens were from the Atlantic Provinces and the St. Lawrence estuary, but a few were from the Northwest Territories. By far the most common species is Berkeleya rutilans. Other species occurring commonly in the Quoddy Region of the Bay of Fundy, and sporadically in space and time elsewhere, arc Navicula delognei (two forms), Nav. pseudocomoides, Nav. smithii, Haslea crucigera, and a new species, Nav.rusticensis. Navicula ramosissima and Nav. mollis in eastern Canada are usually found as scattered cohabitants in tubes of other species. Nitzschia tubicola and Nz. fontifuga also occur sporadically as cohabitants.



1999 ◽  
Vol 56 (12) ◽  
pp. 2420-2432 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruno A Zakardjian ◽  
Jeffrey A Runge ◽  
Stephane Plourde ◽  
Yves Gratton

As an essential step in modeling the influence of circulation on the population dynamics of marine planktonic copepods, we define a simple formulation of swimming behavior that can be used in both Eulerian and Lagrangian models. This formulation forces aggregation of the population toward a preferential depth and can be stage specific and time varying, thus allowing description of either diurnal or seasonal vertical migration. We use the formulation to examine the interaction between the circulation and vertical distribution in controlling horizontal distribution of the common planktonic copepod Calanus finmarchicus in the Lower St. Lawrence Estuary, Canada. We first introduce diel migration into a simple one-dimensional model and then into a model of residual two-dimensional circulation patterns representative of conditions encountered in the Lower St. Lawrence Estuary. Results from the latter indicate that interactions between circulation and stage-specific swimming behaviors are the main mechanisms for aggregation of planktonic crustaceans at the head of the Laurentian Channel and highlight the implications of flushing of the surface-dwelling young stages for the population dynamics of C. finmarchicus in the Lower St. Lawrence Estuary.



1998 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
pp. 271-295 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.F. Marsden ◽  
Y. Gratton


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