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Navigating the unknown: how exploratory traits shape juvenile post-fledging behaviour and survival in gulls.

Unfortunately the abstract isn't available in English yet.
The post-fledging period is a critical phase for inexperienced birds, who must navigate and explore unfamiliar environments to locate essential resources for survival. Successful foraging during this stage relies on acquiring spatial knowledge through exploration, which may develop early in life. In this study, we examined whether the early-life exploratory phenotype, assessed through an open field test (OFT) during the nestling phase, predicts post-fledging behaviour and survival. GPS tracking data from 34 juvenile lesser black-backed gulls (Larus fuscus) over a 20-day period were used to quantify habitat preferences, spatial use (mean squared displacement and revisitation patterns) and time spent flying, foraging and resting. Survival was monitored over six months following fledging, encompassing migration. Early-life exploratory phenotype predicted habitat use: individuals with a more exploratory phenotype frequented urban habitats more often, whereas those with a less exploratory phenotype relied more on agricultural areas. However, exploratory phenotypes did not predict spatial use or survival. These findings indicate that behavioural variation established early in life can have lasting ecological consequences. The absence of a link between exploratory phenotype and survival may reflect phenotype–habitat matching, stochastic environmental factors, or that the OFT does not capture the behavioural components most relevant to survival.

Details

Volume 293
Magazine issue 2065
Type A1: Web of Science-article
Category Research
Magazine Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B
Issns 0962-8452
Publisher Royal Society of London
Language English
Bibtex

@misc{0fb9b1f5-9d70-4955-8d23-028ebb111c27,
title = "Navigating the unknown: how exploratory traits shape juvenile post-fledging behaviour and survival in gulls.",
abstract = "The post-fledging period is a critical phase for inexperienced birds, who must navigate and explore unfamiliar environments to locate essential resources for survival. Successful foraging during this stage relies on acquiring spatial knowledge through exploration, which may develop early in life. In this study, we examined whether the early-life exploratory phenotype, assessed through an open field test (OFT) during the nestling phase, predicts post-fledging behaviour and survival. GPS tracking data from 34 juvenile lesser black-backed gulls (Larus fuscus) over a 20-day period were used to quantify habitat preferences, spatial use (mean squared displacement and revisitation patterns) and time spent flying, foraging and resting. Survival was monitored over six months following fledging, encompassing migration. Early-life exploratory phenotype predicted habitat use: individuals with a more exploratory phenotype frequented urban habitats more often, whereas those with a less exploratory phenotype relied more on agricultural areas. However, exploratory phenotypes did not predict spatial use or survival. These findings indicate that behavioural variation established early in life can have lasting ecological consequences. The absence of a link between exploratory phenotype and survival may reflect phenotype–habitat matching, stochastic environmental factors, or that the OFT does not capture the behavioural components most relevant to survival.",
author = "Mélibée Morel and Lucy Mitchell and Eric Stienen and Frederick Verbruggen and Luc Lens and Wendt Müller",
year = "2026",
month = feb,
day = "25",
doi = "https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2025.2904",
language = "English",
publisher = "Royal Society of London",
address = "Belgium,
type = "Other"
}

Authors

Mélibée Morel
Lucy Mitchell
Eric Stienen
Frederick Verbruggen
Luc Lens
Wendt Müller