Published March 20, 2026 | Version v1
Software Open

Data from: Prebreeding populations and the importance of life history for conserving the world's imperiled seabirds

  • 1. Bowdoin College
  • 2. Memorial University of Newfoundland

Description

Seabird conservation often focuses on nestlings and breeding adults. Yet imperiled seabird populations also contain prebreeders, including juveniles and subadults, that wait several years before breeding at colonies. We use previously-published data on reproductive and survival rates for 90 species to quantify the conservation relevance of prebreeding seabirds. We find, first, that prebreeders average about half of seabird populations (median 48.1%, range 7.6–70.0%). Second, while seabird population growth is much more sensitive to adult survival than prebreeder survival, human-driven changes may shift the importance of prebreeders for future population stability. Third, lowering the breeding age is a potentially useful, but underexplored, route to increasing population growth. Managing prebreeders could thus play a key role in protecting seabirds. This task may require answering fundamental questions about the behavior of young birds. Broadly, we suggest that life history traits (e.g., breeding age) shape both obstacles to, and opportunities for, successful conservation.

Notes

Funding provided by: N/A
Crossref Funder Registry ID: 0

Methods

Compilation, synthesis, and curation of previous-published demographic data.

Files

Files (38.3 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:51d93b6017e358598e7a0d16701d090e
38.3 kB Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1101/2025.02.19.639124 (DOI)
Is source of
10.5061/dryad.dfn2z35cm (DOI)