Publication: Chapter 14: Vulnerability of seabirds on the Great Barrier Reef to climate change
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The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority
Abstract
Seabirds are highly visible, charismatic predators in marine ecosystems that are defined as feeding
exclusively at sea, in either nearshore, offshore or pelagic waters. At a conservative estimate there
are approximately 0.7 billion individuals of 309 species of seabirds globally. Such high population
abundance means that in all ecosystems where seabirds occur the levels of marine resources they
consume are significant. Such high consumption rates also mean that seabirds play a number of
important functional roles in marine ecosystems, including the transfer of nutrients from offshore and
pelagic areas to islands and reefs, seed dispersal and the distribution of organic matter into lower parts
of the developing soil profile (eg burrow-nesting species such as shearwaters).
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Book: Climate change and the Great Barrier Reef: a vulnerability assessment
