Introduction

Optimal foraging theory suggests that predators make foraging decisions that optimize energy intake with minimal energy investment, thus maximizing energetic gain (Charnov 1976; Pyke et al. 1977; Louzao et al. 2014). In the tropical marine environment, prey can be concentrated in areas of enhanced primary productivity [high chlorophyll-a concentration (CHL) and lower sea-surface temperature (SST)] (Ballance et al. 2006), and seabirds may travel directly to these areas where prey encounters are likely to be higher (Weimerskirch 2007; Assali et al. 2017). However, the South Pacific Gyre may be an especially challenging region for seabirds. This region has the most hyper-oligotrophic superficial waters in the world (Claustre et al. 2008) and is considered to be the world’s largest “oceanic desert” (Morel et al. 2010). The gyre covers an area of 37 million square kilometers (Longhurst et al. 1995; Reintjes et al. 2019), with Rapa Nui, also known as Easter Island, located at its center. While some seabird species breeding within the gyre, such as petrels, travel thousands of kilometers to forage at fronts with high productivity (Clay et al. 2017), other species with smaller foraging ranges still manage to forage and breed successfully within the gyre (Jaramillo et al. 2008; Flores et al. 2014). Little is currently known about how seabirds adapt to survive in this tropical, low-productivity environment and how they modify their foraging strategies to fulfill their energetic requirements.

The masked booby (Sula dactylatra) preys mainly on flying fish and squid throughout its range but consumes other prey families according to localities (Nelson 1978; Priddel et al. 2005; Asseid et al. 2006; Weimerskirch et al. 2009; Young et al. 2010; Kappes et al. 2011). Masked boobies forage by plunge diving and have been reported at a maximum distance of 367 km from the colony (Asseid et al. 2006), meaning they are effectively confined within the gyre while breeding. Seabird species inhabiting low-productivity areas like Rapa Nui are expected to spend long periods searching for food because prey abundances are lower and more unpredictable than in productive areas (Ashmole 1971; Longhurst and Pauli 1987; Jaquemet et al. 2005). The waters around Rapa Nui have low variability in terms of CHL and SST at a mesoscale level (Testa 2014) and hence may not provide appropriate physical features for prey accumulation within the birds’ foraging range. However, Rapa Nui forms the part of the Easter Seamount, comprising large seamounts that can reach > 3000 m above the surrounding seafloor (Rodrigo et al. 2014). Seamounts support a wide diversity of fish and other potential prey species and may thus act as a resource patch (Riotte-Lambert and Matthiopoulos 2019) providing enhanced foraging opportunities for marine top predators (Ballance et al. 1997; Pitcher et al. 2007; Clark et al. 2010). Seamounts can therefore be critical foraging areas for seabirds in the food-stressed environment of oligotrophic oceans (Pitcher et al. 2007).

Tropical regions typically experience variable environmental conditions (Hamer et al. 2002). During periods of lower productivity, which affect prey abundance, seabirds may forage further and for longer periods (Burger and Piatt 1990; Harding et al. 2007), use different areas to forage (Péron et al. 2012), or switch prey species and size (Burger and Piatt 1990; Croxall et al. 1999). However, conditions within the gyre are less well known than for other oceanographic regions (Mannocci et al. 2014; Clay et al. 2017; Reintjes et al. 2019), and the levels of variability of environmental conditions are poorly known (Testa 2014). It is possible that masked boobies may adjust their foraging movements and diet between years if considerable environmental variation occurs (Nelson 1978; Sommerfeld et al. 2015). However, adjustments in their foraging movements and diet can be costly, because spending more time foraging during poor years increases absence times from the nest, potentially leading to deferred reproduction, lower growth rates, and higher chick mortality (Quillfeldt and Masello 2013; Guillemette et al. 2018).

With around 70 breeding pairs, the masked booby is the most numerous of the few native species on Rapa Nui (Jaramillo et al. 2008). It has a predictable presence on the island and is large enough to carry tracking devices that can be used to research their foraging strategies. These characteristics make the masked booby an ideal species for determining (1) if foraging incidents occur in relation to static marine features like seamounts in Rapa Nui and (2) if the birds’ foraging ecology remains consistent between years based on environmental characteristics. It was expected that (1) masked boobies would travel directly to seamounts, reducing foraging times, with lower variability in foraging behavior than if prey patches were unknown (Sommerfeld et al 2013; Patrick et al. 2014; Oppel et al. 2015), and (2) that their foraging parameters would adapt to inter-annual environmental conditions.

Materials and methods

Data collection

Rapa Nui is the highest point of the Easter Seamount chain, reaching > 400 m above sea level (Rodrigo et al. 2014). Moai and the Pukao are the closest seamounts to Rapa Nui, reaching > 2000 m above the sea floor, with summits at 261 and 623 m depths, respectively (Rodrigo et al. 2014). Seamounts produce local turbulence and recirculation patterns that promote the entry of nutrients at relatively shallow depths, thus enhancing the primary productivity at Rapa Nui (Testa 2014). The seamounts at Rapa Nui are considered important marine conservation spots due to their diversity of fish (Friedlander et al. 2013) and are used sporadically by local fishermen (Mecho et al. 2019).

Data were collected at Motu Nui (109.4° W, 27.2° S, Fig. 1), a 3.9 ha islet covered with grass and surrounded by sea cliffs, located southwest of Rapa Nui. On Motu Nui, masked boobies nest in areas free from grass on the top of the islet and on the cliffs. Similar to Rapa Nui, Motu Nui has introduced species, including the Argentine ant (Linepithema humile) and the Chimago caracara (Phalcoboenus chimango), which can be potential predators of seabird chicks and eggs (Luna et al. 2018). There were 56 breeding pairs of masked boobies in 2016 and 77 breeding pairs in 2017.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Motu Nui location in relation to the South Pacific Ocean (a) and Rapa Nui (b), showing chlorophyll-a concentration

The foraging movements of masked boobies were studied by attaching GPS CatLog-S devices sealed in a heat-shrink epoxy casing (3.7 × 2.2 × 0.8 cm, Catnip Technologies, Hong Kong) to nine chick-rearing birds (3 females and 6 males) in October and November of 2016 and to 14 chick-rearing birds (8 females and 6 males) in November of 2017. Chicks from tagged birds were covered with down and weighed 0.4–2.1 kg, and were thus estimated to be 1–8 weeks old (Priddel et al. 2005). Eight and 12 of the tracked birds in 2016 and 2017, respectively, were simultaneously equipped with time–depth recorders (TDRs; CEFAS Data Storage Tags G5+, Cefas Technology, UK). Two of the TDR devices had large sensor variations and were excluded from further analyses.

The GPS devices were programmed to record time, latitude, and longitude every 4 min, and the TDRs to record pressure data every second, and temperature every minute at 12 bits. The GPS devices weighed 26 g and the TDR devices weighed 6.5 g; given that masked boobies weighed 1.8–2.6 kg, the total weight was < 3% of the body mass threshold for attached devices (Wilson and McMahon 2006; Vandenabeele et al. 2012). The individuals were captured at their nest using a hand net from approximately 1 m. The loggers were attached on top of the three central tail feathers using waterproof adhesive TESA tape. All individuals were released back to their nest after attaching the devices. Birds were captured between 07:00 and 10:00 h and between 16:00 and 19:00 h to avoid the hottest time of the day. The total handling time during capture and recapture did not exceed 10 min.

Diet samples were collected opportunistically from masked boobies that regurgitated spontaneously as a result of the authors presence in the colony, or during tagging efforts. Eighteen regurgitated samples were collected in 2016 and 15 in 2017. Due to the digested state of the samples and a lack of information on Rapa Nui fish species, fish and squid in regurgitates were identified to family level using a Pacific fish guide (Fischer et al. 1995) and a site-specific fish guide (Randall and Cea 2010). Notably, although regurgitates provide a useful and non-invasive method for obtaining valuable information about seabird feeding ecology, the presence of different prey items in the diet may vary due to different intrinsic digestion rates (Barrett et al. 2007).

Regarding local environmental predictors, data on CHL, bathymetry, and SST were downloaded from https://coastwatch.pfeg.noaa.gov/erddap. CHL and SST data were derived from monthly composites with a resolution of 0.025° (approx. 2.5 km) from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) sensor carried onboard NASA’s Aqua satellite, and bathymetry (BATH) data from ETOPO1, 0.017°. The names and coordinates of the nearby seamounts were obtained from Rodrigo et al. (2014). Average environmental conditions were extracted using the raster data of BATH, CHL, and SST inside a radius of 120 km (maximum range of a masked booby from Rapa Nui with an error threshold) using the function “extract” in the package “raster” (Hijmans 2019a).

Data processing

Tracking and diving data were processed using R 3.5.2 (R Core Team 2018). Foraging trip parameters including maximum foraging trip distance, total distance traveled, and trip duration were calculated after running the function “tripSplit” provided by Lascelles et al. (2016). The maximum foraging trip distance was measured at the most distant point in a straight line from the colony. Total distance traveled was the sum of the distance between consecutive fixes from departure to return to the colony. Trip duration was the total time between departure and return to the colony. Foraging trips were considered as soon as the bird left a 1.5 km radius from the colony, because flying fish leaving the water and masked boobies foraging in the vicinity of the colony was observed. Although short trips may include birds bathing (Granadeiro et al. 2018), the presence of diving events in the vicinity of the colony demonstrated that these areas were also used as foraging grounds.

Using GPS data at 4 min intervals, foraging behavior during the foraging trips was classified using the speed and turning angle from successive locations with value delimiters of 0.60–3.14 radians (high turn) and 0–12 km h−1 (low speed). Value delimiters for speed and turning angle were based on the Expectation Maximization binary Clustering (EMbC) algorithm (Garriga et al. 2016, 2019) and were within the thresholds used for other sulids (Mendez et al. 2017). Regarding diving data, a zero offset correction was applied for surface drift in the pressure sensor, and only dives deeper than 0.5 m were considered as true dives (Supplementary material 1). It is acknowledged that this threshold may omit shallow dives (Hagihara et al. 2011), but a larger threshold identified 21% more records as dives by including false dives due to noise or activities such as sitting on the water surface. Mean and maximum dive duration (s), mean and maximum diving depth (m), and diving rate (dives h−1) were calculated per individual trip.

Diving and foraging locations are not necessarily the same; dives may reflect attempts to capture prey, whereas foraging locations reflect searching behavior (Bennison et al. 2017). Because of this dissimilarity, foraging and diving activities during the foraging trips were tested for matches in time and space. First, the locations were grouped into “events” considering at least three successive locations (an area-restricted search approach; see Mendez et al. 2017). The locations falling within a 10 min range were then merged and assigned a median latitude and longitude as a central location. Finally, the locations were matched. False positives (foraging locations but no dives) may occur if boobies capture prey on the wing (Weimerskirch et al. 2005), in which case TDRs will fail to record dives, while false negatives (dives not matching foraging locations) may arise from opportunistic foraging events (Montevecchi et al. 2009), in which case the ability of a classification based on speed and turning angles is limited for identifying foraging behavior. Due to the associated error in each technique, foraging and diving events were tested separately. A radius of 10 km around each seamount was created and diving and foraging events within this radius were classified as “close to seamount,” while others were classified as “far from seamount.” Distance from the seamounts was calculated for each dive and each foraging event using the package “geosphere” (Hijmans 2019b).

Statistical analyses

It was tested if seamounts affected masked boobies’ foraging behavior by applying linear mixed-effects models. Diving rate was used as dependent variable; seamount use or not use was used as factors, with the birds’ identity as random factor. It was determined if foraging or diving events were more likely to occur in the immediacies of the seamounts using Chi-square analysis to compare dive and foraging events classified as “close to seamount” vs “far from seamount.” The variability of individuals’ foraging behavior was evaluated by analysis of variance with foraging or diving parameters as dependent variables and the birds’ identity as a fixed factor. Individual consistencies in foraging parameters were further investigated using the individual as a random intercept in the package “rptR” (Stoffel et al. 2017; Grecian et al. 2018). This package calculates variances between and within individuals and produces a value between 0 and 1, with values closer to 1 representing higher consistency and values closer to 0 representing lower consistency (Courbin et al. 2018).

Inter-annual differences in foraging trip parameters were examined using linear mixed-effects models with foraging (maximum foraging range, trip duration, and total distance traveled) and diving parameters (mean diving depth, mean diving duration, and dive rate) as dependent variables, year as a fixed factor, and birds’ identity as a random factor to account for pseudo-replication. The models were fitted using the “lme” function in the package “nlme” (Pinheiro et al. 2019). Model selection was performed using a likelihood ratio test. There was no significant difference in foraging or diving parameters between the sexes (P > 0.05), and information for both sexes was therefore pooled (Supplementary material 2). Residuals were plotted against fitted values, and there was no obvious deviation from the assumption of normally distributed and homogeneous residuals. To test if similar areas were used during both years, the Bhattacharyya coefficient (BA) was extracted using the function “overlap” in the package “ctmm” based on the GPS data (Calabrese et al. 2016). The BA is a measure of similarity between two probability distributions, which gives the overlap in the kernel density estimates (Winner et al. 2018). The overlap between years was calculated by analysis of similarity (ANOSIM) with BA using the package “vegan” (Oksanen 2019). The number of prey items by year was compared using Chi-square tests. The results are shown untransformed, and the values for foraging parameters are given as mean ± standard deviation.

Results

A total of 123 foraging trips were recorded from 23 individual masked boobies (Fig. 2). Nests were monitored every day during the tagging period of 4–6 days and no bird showed signs of discomfort associated with the devices, such as making frequent contact with the devices or increased preening activities. Individuals performed an average of 1.64 ± 0.48 trips per day. The mean maximum distance from the colony was 31.9 ± 21.5 km, mean foraging trip duration was 3.4 ± 2.1 h, and the mean total distance traveled during a foraging trip was 80.6 ± 54.2 km (Fig. 3). Diving information was obtained from 18 individuals. Most dives occurred at the surface below 2 m (59%) and lasted < 2 s (49%) (Fig. 4). The deepest dive was 6 m and the longest time submerged was 10 s. Dives occurred throughout the foraging trip at a rate of 4.8 ± 4.2 (range 0.2–36.7) dives h−1, and not at specific sites (Fig. 5). Regurgitates contained 3.7 ± 3.2 items from 1.5 ± 0.8 prey families. Considering the total number of prey items collected, flying fish dominated the diet (Fig. 6).

Fig. 2
figure 2

Foraging trips of individual masked boobies (Sula dactylatra) at Rapa Nui during the breeding seasons of 2016 (n = 9, dashed lines) and 2017 (n = 14, solid lines). Black dot indicates the location of the masked booby colony

Fig. 3
figure 3

Foraging trip parameters for masked boobies (Sula dactylatra) at Rapa Nui based on the total number of trips (n = 123)

Fig. 4
figure 4

Dive parameters for masked boobies (Sula dactylatra) at Rapa Nui based on the total number of dives (n = 1404)

Fig. 5
figure 5

Diving (n = 497, red circles) and foraging events (n = 495, yellow diamonds) of tracked masked boobies (Sula dactylatra) at Rapa Nui. Triangles indicate the seamounts; grey circles indicate the area of influence of the seamounts; size of the symbol indicates the number of dives or foraging locations per event; black dot indicates the colony

Fig. 6
figure 6

Prey species in regurgitates from masked boobies (Sula dactylatra) at Rapa Nui during the breeding seasons of 2016 (18 regurgitates, 56 prey items) and 2017 (15 regurgitates, 67 prey items). Families identified include Exocoetidae (flying fish), Kyphosidae (sea chub), Engraulidae (anchovy), Hemiramphidae (halfbeaks), Clupeidae (sardines), Omnastrephidae (squid), Carangidae (jacks), and Coryphaenidae (dolphinfish). A number of regurgitates that contained the prey item are presented above the bars and correspond to regurgitates of 2016/2017

Foraging and dive events (n = 554) matched in 32% of all events (true positives), while 44% of all foraging events (n = 495) showed no dives (false positives) and 23% of all dive events (n = 497) did not match foraging events (false negatives). Foraging (Chi-square test, X494 = 467, P = 0.80) and dive events (Chi-square test, X496 = 466, P = 0.82) were not significantly related to seamounts (Fig. 7). Dive rates (linear mixed-effects model, F(1, 95) = 0.27, P = 0.60) did not differ significantly between trips within or outside the immediacies (< 10 km) of seamounts. Only 28 of the 495 foraging events (searching behavior) and 31 of the 497 total dive events (attempts of capturing prey) occurred in the immediacies of seamounts (Fig. 5). Foraging and diving parameters varied between individuals (Fig. 2, Supplementary material 3), with significant inter-individual differences in maximum distance from the colony, trip duration, mean dive duration, dive depth, and diving rate (Table 1). Individuals’ dive depths and durations were repeatable, but the maximum distance from the colony, trip duration, and diving rate were not (Table 1).

Fig. 7
figure 7

Diving (n = 497) and foraging events (n = 495) of masked boobies (Sula dactylatra) in relation to distance to the colony and to the Pukao and Moai Seamounts

Table 1 Analyses of foraging and diving parameters of chick-rearing masked boobies (Sula dactylatra) breeding at Rapa Nui in 2016 (GPS = 9, TDR = 6) and 2017 (GPS = 14, TDR = 12), showing inter-annual, inter-individual, and intra-individual comparisons

Within the foraging range of masked boobies, the water depth was 2.9 ± 0.5 km, CHL was of 0.02 ± 0.01 mg m−3 in both years, and SST was 22.2 ± 0.4 °C in 2016 and 21.6 ± 0.2 °C in 2017 (Fig. 8). There were no significant differences in foraging and diving parameters between 2016 and 2017 (Table 1), and the areas used by masked boobies overlapped between years (BA range at 50% UD: 0.53–0.99; ANOSIM R = 0.01, P = 0.10; BA range at 95% UD: 0.53–0.99; ANOSIM R = 0.01, P = 0.09). The main prey items in both years were flying fish, but the birds’ diet was more diverse in 2016 than in 2017, with the inclusion of anchovies (Engraulidae), sardines (Clupeidae), and dolphinfish (Coryphaenidae) (Fig. 6). Sea chubs (Kyphosidae) were more important in 2017, occurring in six regurgitates with 4.6 ± 2.4 prey items, compared with two regurgitates with 1.5 ± 0.7 prey items in 2016. Nevertheless, the prey items in the diet were homogeneous between years (Chi-square test, X8 = 2.50, P = 0.96).

Fig. 8
figure 8

Chlorophyll-a concentrations at Rapa Nui in November 2016 (a) and 2017 (b), and sea surface temperatures in November 2016 (c) and 2017 (d). Black dot indicates the study area

Discussion

The results of this study provide novel information on the foraging behavior of a seabird species in the South Pacific Gyre. The diving parameters were similar to previous reports on diving depths and durations acquired for the species at Clipperton Island (Weimerskirch et al. 2009) and Phillip Island (Sommerfeld et al. 2013). Masked boobies at Rapa Nui made more trips per day (1.6 trips per day) than birds from St. Helena and Ascension Island (0.4–1.0 trips per day; Oppel et al. 2015), possibly related to the fact that foraging trips of masked boobies from Rapa Nui were similar to or shorter than those of masked boobies’ from the other colonies. Interestingly, foraging trips of masked boobies would be expected to be shorter in colonies where water productivity was higher, and should thus reflect the possibilities of prey encounter. However, although the CHLs at St. Helena and Ascension Island were 0.07 and 0.08 mg m−3, respectively (Oppel et al. 2015), foraging trips were similar to or longer (3.4 and 11.4 h) and farther (41 and 78 km) than those at Rapa Nui, where the CHL was 0.02 mg m−3. Similarly, masked boobies on Clipperton Island performed further and longer foraging trips on average (103 km and 8.9 h) in waters that were 10 times more productive (CHL 0.20 mg m−3) (Weimerskirch et al. 2008) than at Rapa Nui.

The larger foraging ranges reported in other studies could be related to greater inter- or intra-specific competition at other sites. Masked boobies in the South Atlantic foraged closer to smaller colonies compared with more densely populated colonies (Oppel et al. 2015). Accordingly, masked booby colonies on St. Helena (500 individuals), Ascension (4600 individuals) (Oppel et al. 2015), and Clipperton Island (120 000 individuals) (Weimerskirch et al. 2008) were larger, supporting the idea that larger colonies might experience high levels of intra-specific competition, resulting in longer foraging ranges (Lewis et al. 2001). Similar to land deserts, Rapa Nui supports small populations of generalist predators (Ashmole 1963; Cook 1997; Ayal 2007). The masked booby colony was ~ 70 breeding pairs, and no other large plunge divers, except tropicbirds, occur regularly in the area. The shorter foraging trips of masked boobies from Rapa Nui may thus reflect the low level of competition that occurs in small colonies.

The main prey item of masked boobies was flying fish, coinciding with results throughout their distributional range (Nelson 1978; Asseid et al. 2006; Weimerskirch et al. 2009; Young et al. 2010; Kappes et al. 2011). The diet of masked boobies at Rapa Nui included species, such as anchovies and sea chubs, which were not reported in previous studies. The difference in supplementary prey species included in the diet of masked boobies must reflect the fact that geographically separated populations of seabirds are exposed to different environmental and ecological conditions (Garthe et al. 2007; Castillo-Guerrero et al. 2016).

Foraging strategy

It was hypothesized that seamounts may attract foraging seabirds at Rapa Nui because of their increased food supply (Morato et al. 2010); however, contrary to these expectations, masked boobies did not appear to use seamounts. Similarly, red-footed boobies (Sula sula) did not preferentially forage over seamounts in the Mozambique Channel (Weimerskirch et al. 2005), though the use of seamounts appears to differ among seabird species (Pitcher et al. 2007; Clay et al. 2017). Masked boobies do not feed on primary producers, and there is a natural delay between the primary producers and fish (Suryan et al. 2012). Seamounts may thus not concentrate the prey items that boobies are searching for, and may even have the opposite effect, given that flying fish are offshore specialist species that prefer low-productivity waters (Churnside et al. 2017; Lewallen et al. 2018).

In contrast, the foraging behavior of masked boobies in the hyper-oligotrophic waters of Rapa Nui showed that their prey was not predictably distributed or associated with static environmental features. This was demonstrated by the fact that foraging parameters differed both between and within individuals. It was also found that an individual bird might make several trips on the same day following different behaviors and traveling to different places, in accordance with previous findings that showed low foraging-site fidelity in tropical seabirds (Weimerskirch 2007; Kappes et al. 2011; Hennicke and Weimerskirch 2014; Soanes et al. 2016; Oppel et al. 2017). Flying fish shoals are highly unpredictable (Oxenford et al. 1995); traveling to the same area is thus of limited value to masked boobies, and it may be more efficient to search in different locations. Other animals facing unpredictable resources move without any specific direction but then travel directly when they see something of interest (Venter et al. 2017). This seems to reflect the behavior of masked boobies searching for a prey patch, subsurface predators, or conspecifics. The ephemeral distributions of flying fish are further supported by the techniques used by fishermen, who change locations both within and between days to catch flying fish in the Caribbean (Oxenford et al. 1995) and at Rapa Nui (Pau Hito, Rapa Nui fishermen, pers. comm.). Exploring new areas benefited fishermen facing stochastic systems (O’Farrell et al. 2019). Similarly, an explorative approach may be the dominant searching strategy used by seabirds in oligotrophic waters like Rapa Nui and may allow the masked booby population to maintain a foraging range < 110 km radius.

Inter-annual comparisons

There were some differences in the proportion of prey families included in the diet of masked boobies between years. Between-year differences in seabird diets are often associated with environmental conditions that affect prey distribution and abundance (Burger and Piatt 1990; Croxall et al. 1999). However, the environmental conditions at Rapa Nui were similar during both years. Although the present understanding of prey abundances is limited by a lack of information, the differences in supplementary prey species included in the diets between years may merely be an effect of the birds’ opportunistic behavior. Flying fish occur in patchily distributed shoals that are very difficult to predict in space and time (Oxenford et al. 1995), and birds may prevent interruptions to their food supply by opportunistically including other prey species (MacArthur and Pianka 1966; Giraldeau and Dubois 2008). For example, masked boobies included small sea chubs, an inshore fish of which juveniles may occur offshore amongst drifting flotsam and algae (Randall and Cea 2010).

The foraging and diving parameters of the masked boobies were similar in both study years. Similarly, petrels, as other tropical seabird inhabiting the South Pacific Gyre, showed no inter-annual differences in their foraging parameters (Clay et al. 2017). The consistent foraging parameters and relatively stable environmental conditions around Rapa Nui suggest that there was no need for the birds to change their foraging behaviors under these conditions. Flying fish may occur in the region throughout the year because they do not generally make long-distance migrations, and they have short generations (1–2 years) and small home ranges of < 500 km2 (Lewallen et al. 2018). Masked boobies form associations with tuna species during foraging (Au and Pitman 1986), and tuna may occur in the area because of the presence of flying fish and because of the suitable sea conditions around Rapa Nui for some tuna species, including moderate SST and low surface CHL (Teo et al. 2007). However, detailed information on the distributions of flying fish and tuna is lacking, largely because data on the quantitative distributions of oceanic pelagic species are difficult and expensive to collect (Oxenford et al. 1995; Churnside et al. 2017; Lewallen et al. 2018). Nonetheless, masked booby foraging parameters suggest that prey availability is regular and stable, otherwise their energy reserves would be depleted and they would avoid breeding, which is demonstrably not the case. The evidence suggests that masked boobies breed on Rapa Nui throughout the year and have done so since at least 1904 (Marin and Caceres 2010; Flores et al. 2014).

Peaks in productivity are often associated with an increase in food availability, which plays a significant role in the time of breeding for many seabirds (Hamer et al. 2002). However, tropical areas tend to have a weak productivity peak (Weimerskirch 2007). Year-round breeding of several tropical seabirds may thus be due to the stable but short year-round availability of food, which offers multiple breeding opportunities throughout the year, but for only a limited number of breeding pairs (Reynolds et al. 2014; Tarburton 2018). It is therefore worth speculating that the year-round breeding of masked boobies in Rapa Nui may be another adaptation to hyper-oligotrophic conditions, by diluting the peak of food demands and potentially allowing more birds to coexist in the same breeding grounds than if they all bred at the same time.

Conclusions

The current study provides the first description of the foraging ecology of a plunge-diving seabird species in the hyper-oligotrophic waters of the South Pacific Gyre. The results suggest that the foraging strategies of masked boobies were influenced by the distributions of flying fish at a distance < 110 km from the coast. The locations of foraging trips indicated that traveling to a specific location, such as seamounts, may be of little value to masked boobies in Rapa Nui. The stability of the environmental conditions around Rapa Nui means that the birds’ foraging behavior remains similar between years, implying similar prey abundances. These results show that masked boobies can adapt to a wide range of oceanographic conditions, including the hyper-oligotrophic waters of the South Pacific Gyre, thus demonstrating the flexible characteristics of this species, which may in turn explain its wide distribution throughout the tropics.