Litcius/Paper detail

A colonial-nesting seabird shows no heart-rate response to drone-based population surveys

Erica A. Geldart, Andrew F. Barnas, Christina A. D. Semeniuk, H. Grant Gilchrist, Christopher M. Harris, Oliver P. Love

2022Scientific Reports20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Aerial drones are increasingly being used as tools for ecological research and wildlife monitoring in hard-to-access study systems, such as in studies of colonial-nesting birds. Despite their many advantages over traditional survey methods, there remains concerns about possible disturbance effects that standard drone survey protocols may have on bird colonies. There is a particular gap in the study of their influence on physiological measures of stress. We measured heart rates of incubating female common eider ducks (Somateria mollissima) to determine whether our drone-based population survey affected them. To do so, we used heart-rate recorders placed in nests to quantify their heart rate in response to a quadcopter drone flying transects 30 m above the nesting colony. Eider heart rate did not change from baseline (measured in the absence of drone survey flights) by a drone flying at a fixed altitude and varying horizontal distances from the bird. Our findings suggest that carefully planned drone-based surveys of focal species have the potential to be carried out without causing physiological impacts among colonial-nesting eiders.

Topics & Concepts

DroneEiderQuadcopterPopulationAerial surveyWildlifeEcologyFisheryGeographyNest (protein structural motif)TransectNesting (process)HabitatBiologyDemographyCartographyEngineeringAerospace engineeringGeneticsMechanical engineeringSociologyBiochemistryAvian ecology and behaviorAnimal Behavior and ReproductionWildlife Ecology and Conservation