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What can seabirds tell us about the tide?
- Source :
- Ocean Science, Vol 14, Pp 1483-1490 (2018)
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- Copernicus GmbH, 2018.
-
Abstract
- Small global positioning system (GPS) trackers are now routinely used to study the movement and behaviour of birds at sea. If the birds rest on the water they become “drifters of opportunity” and can be used to give information about surface currents. In this paper, we use a small data set from satellite-tracked razorbills (Alca torda) in the Irish Sea to test the potential of this idea for measuring tidal currents. Razorbills regularly rest on the sea overnight and their tracks at this time are consistent with their drifting with the tidal flows and changing direction as the flood turns to ebb and vice versa. Data from 4 years (2011–2014) have been binned in a geographical grid and analysed to give the variation of current over a mean tidal cycle in each grid element. A map of maximum current speed is consistent with a numerical model of the tidal currents in the region. The root mean square difference between observed maximum speed and that predicted by the model is 0.15 m s−1, about 15 % of typical current speeds in the area. The divergence between bird-track speed and model prediction increases in regions of the fastest tidal currents. The method clearly has its limitations, but the results of this study show that tagged birds resting on the sea have potential to provide relatively inexpensive quantitative information about surface tidal currents over an extended geographical area.
- Subjects :
- lcsh:GE1-350
0106 biological sciences
Rest (physics)
Small data
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
Flood myth
business.industry
Ocean current
lcsh:Geography. Anthropology. Recreation
Root mean square difference
General Medicine
Geodesy
01 natural sciences
010605 ornithology
Divergence
Current (stream)
lcsh:G
Global Positioning System
14. Life underwater
business
lcsh:Environmental sciences
Geology
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18120792
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Ocean Science, Vol 14, Pp 1483-1490 (2018)
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2c058c41eeacd9738b8696d4298728de