Studholme, Katharine Ryder2018-04-302018-04-302018-04-30http://hdl.handle.net/10222/73902Factors influencing animal fitness during the nonbreeding period are critically important but remain largely unknown for many species. Here, I employed tracking and physiological sampling to gain insight into nonbreeding distributions, migratory behavior, and potential carryover effects in a North Pacific seabird. From 2014-17, nonbreeding Cassin’s auklets from British Columbian colonies occupied nearshore waters from Alaska to Baja California, utilizing regions north of the colony in summer/fall, south of the colony in fall/winter, and returning to the colony region >1 month prior to laying in early spring. Four general migratory tactics were expressed – North, South, North-South, and Local migration – with individuals exhibiting substantial variability in finer-scale phenology and choice of residency areas. Diverse nonbreeding experiences were expected to drive variability in the strength of carryover effects; however, indicators of pre-breeding physiologic state and diet did not predict reproductive investment (egg size) in an additional year, potentially due to oceanographic context.enmigrationfeather corticosteronestable isotopeegg sizegeolocatorenvironmental contexthabitat selectionAlcidNonbreeding distributions and potential carryover effects in a sentinel north pacific seabird, the Cassin's aukletThesis