JULIET LAMB
  • RESEARCH INTERESTS
  • PROJECTS
    • Brown Pelican tracking project
    • Tern nesting habitat restoration
    • FAME Orkney seabird tracking
  • RECENT PUBLICATIONS
  • CV
  • PRESENTATIONS
  • BLOG
  • MEDIA
  • MUSIC

Presentations/posters

Long-term physiological responses of nestling seabirds to variation in prey availability and nest conditions (oral presentation)
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Juliet S Lamb, Kathleen O'Reilly, and Patrick G R Jodice
Society for Integrative Comparative Biology Annual Meeting, January 2016

Sex, Death, and Oil: Conservation implications of individual variation in Brown Pelican movement patterns (oral presentation)
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Juliet S Lamb and Patrick G R Jodice
World Seabird Conference, October 2015

Variation in Brown Pelican energy provisioning rates across a range of juvenile forage fish availability (oral presentation)
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Juliet S Lamb, Yvan Satgé and Patrick G R Jodice
Waterbirds Society Meeting, August 2015

Should I stay, or should I go? Conservation implications of individual variation in Brown Pelican migration strategies (poster)
Juliet S Lamb, Yvan Satgé and Patrick G R Jodice
International Conference on Conservation Biology, August 2015

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Brown Pelican fledging success and diet in the Northwestern Gulf of Mexico: Potential drivers of changing regional distribution (poster)
Juliet S Lamb, Yvan Satgé and Patrick G R Jodice
Annual Meeting of the Pacific Seabird Group, 19 February 2015

Gradients in Brown Pelican foraging radius, chick condition, and diet across the northern Gulf of Mexico (oral presentation)
Juliet S Lamb and Patrick G R Jodice
Annual Meeting of the Pacific Seabird Group, 20 February 2014

Twitter conferences
1st World Seabird Twitter Conference

Juliet S Lamb and Yvan S Satgé
21 March 2015

1 #WSTC1 Numbers of Brown pelicans have grown exponentially in Northern Texas but remain stable or decline elsewhere in the state - why?

— Project Pelican (@project_pelican) March 21, 2015

2 #WSTC1 We measured chick condition, fledging success, and frequency, size and content of chick meals in the four largest Texas colonies

— Project Pelican (@project_pelican) March 21, 2015

3 #WSTC1 In the North, twice as many (and healthier) fledglings were produced per nest as in the southernmost colony pic.twitter.com/rp4pCbCoL7

— Project Pelican (@project_pelican) March 21, 2015

4 #WSTC1 Northern chicks were fed smaller, more frequent meals, containing more Menhaden in smaller size classes pic.twitter.com/7sBgyANnSJ

— Project Pelican (@project_pelican) March 21, 2015

5 #WSTC1 However, our energy density analyses suggest that energetic content is similar across prey types and regions pic.twitter.com/TQ6XEaQkA7

— Project Pelican (@project_pelican) March 21, 2015

6 #WSTC1 Prey availability more than quality may drive higher nest productivity and rapid growth in the North pic.twitter.com/8MHIZ8Ea1c

— Project Pelican (@project_pelican) March 21, 2015

Diet composition and provisioning rates determine reproductive success in a subtropical nearshore seabird feeding on low-prey energy

Juliet S Lamb and Yvan G Satgé
2nd Wolrd Seabird Twitter Conference, 13 April 2016
Winner of Best Presentation

1 #WSTC2 While prey quality is a key driver of seabird demographics in temperate regions, its effects on tropical seabirds are unknown.

— Project Pelican (@project_pelican) April 13, 2016

2 #WSTC2 We collected data on Brown Pelican nestling diets and provisioning in the northern Gulf of Mexico pic.twitter.com/1I8R2I8m0K

— Project Pelican (@project_pelican) April 13, 2016

3 #WSTC2 Although Menhaden and Anchovies were the most common prey, they were not the highest in energy density pic.twitter.com/PQL8kS4o9O

— Project Pelican (@project_pelican) April 13, 2016

4 #WSTC2 Productivity was highly correlated to energy provisioning rate, which was driven by feeding frequency pic.twitter.com/BBfstK523a

— Project Pelican (@project_pelican) April 13, 2016

5 #WSTC2 Similarly to whales, Brown pelicans optimize their foraging strategy by choosing availability over quality pic.twitter.com/0FhDtXeTwR

— Project Pelican (@project_pelican) April 13, 2016

6 #WSTC2 Other tropical seabirds also experience low variety in prey quality but may respond in different ways pic.twitter.com/1EJILMyyMc

— Project Pelican (@project_pelican) April 13, 2016
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  • RESEARCH INTERESTS
  • PROJECTS
    • Brown Pelican tracking project
    • Tern nesting habitat restoration
    • FAME Orkney seabird tracking
  • RECENT PUBLICATIONS
  • CV
  • PRESENTATIONS
  • BLOG
  • MEDIA
  • MUSIC