Black-legged kittiwakes as messengers of Atlantification in the Arctic
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/12628Date
2018-01-19Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Vihtakari, Mikko; Welcker, Jorg; Moe, Børge; Chastel, Olivier; Tartu, Sabrina; Hop, Haakon; Bech, Claus; Descamps, Sébastien; Gabrielsen, Geir W.Abstract
Climate warming is rapidly altering marine ecosystems towards a more temperate state on the
European side of the Arctic. However, this “Atlantification” has rarely been confirmed, as long-term
datasets on Arctic marine organisms are scarce. We present a 19-year time series (1982–2016) of diet
samples from black-legged kittiwakes as an indicator of the changes in a high Arctic marine ecosystem
(Kongsfjorden, Svalbard). Our results highlight a shift from Arctic prey dominance until 2006 to a more
mixed diet with high contribution of Atlantic fishes. Capelin, an Atlantic species, dominated the diet
composition in 2007, marking a shift in the food web. The occurrence of polar cod, a key Arctic fish
species, positively correlated with sea ice index, whereas Atlantic species demonstrated the opposite
correlation indicating that the diet shift was likely connected with recent climate warming. Kittiwakes,
which gather available fish and zooplankton near the sea surface to feed their chicks, can act as
messengers of ecosystem change. Changes in their diet reveal that the Kongsfjord system has drifted in
an Atlantic direction over the last decade.