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A novel foraging strategy in gentoo penguins breeding at sub-Antarctic Marion Island

A novel foraging strategy in gentoo penguins breeding at sub-Antarctic Marion Island
A novel foraging strategy in gentoo penguins breeding at sub-Antarctic Marion Island

To help meet the high energy demands of raising the young, some seabirds alternate between short, frequent foraging trips to maximize food delivery to the young, and infrequent, long foraging trips that serve towards self-maintenance. Our study is the first to investigate the foraging behaviour of gentoo penguins at Marion Island, which we did through a combined use of GPS loggers and time-depth recorders. The shallow shelf between Marion and Prince Edward Islands proved to be an important foraging area, and penguins exploited this area using a novel foraging strategy. Penguins undertook alternating trips of relatively short and long durations. Short trips, performed in the afternoon, were likely associated with self-maintenance as they were followed by roosting on the beach overnight and not returning to the colony. They were followed by longer and more distant foraging trips, after which birds returned to the colony to provision chicks. To our knowledge, this is the first study to demonstrate alternating trip lengths in gentoo penguins and the first to associate short trips with self-maintenance in seabirds. We suggest that due to the close proximity of a predictable foraging area for these penguins at Marion Island, there is minimal energetic cost to return to land after self-provisioning. Hence, unlike other seabirds that feed at greater distances from their breeding colonies, gentoo penguins are afforded the opportunity for short self-maintenance trips. Finally, we argue that these birds may be using this novel strategy due to sub-optimal feeding conditions resulting from environmental change.

0025-3162
Carpenter-Kling, Tegan
1d35fc56-1e0f-4d27-ab94-41bd2b876a91
Handley, Jonathan M.
0703b969-f716-4cad-a0e2-52db8a35447d
Green, David B.
c09a8721-22cf-4b59-b554-94a43f573cbd
Reisinger, Ryan R.
4eaf9440-48e5-41fa-853f-d46457e5444e
Makhado, Azwainewi B.
abd0b81d-4495-4296-a285-490170991f80
Crawford, Robert J.M.
70efab42-9994-4a63-8923-cdd1fd101474
Pistorius, Pierre A.
5a585272-2721-45dd-9384-56a05a477b36
Carpenter-Kling, Tegan
1d35fc56-1e0f-4d27-ab94-41bd2b876a91
Handley, Jonathan M.
0703b969-f716-4cad-a0e2-52db8a35447d
Green, David B.
c09a8721-22cf-4b59-b554-94a43f573cbd
Reisinger, Ryan R.
4eaf9440-48e5-41fa-853f-d46457e5444e
Makhado, Azwainewi B.
abd0b81d-4495-4296-a285-490170991f80
Crawford, Robert J.M.
70efab42-9994-4a63-8923-cdd1fd101474
Pistorius, Pierre A.
5a585272-2721-45dd-9384-56a05a477b36

Carpenter-Kling, Tegan, Handley, Jonathan M., Green, David B., Reisinger, Ryan R., Makhado, Azwainewi B., Crawford, Robert J.M. and Pistorius, Pierre A. (2017) A novel foraging strategy in gentoo penguins breeding at sub-Antarctic Marion Island. Marine Biology, 164 (2), [33]. (doi:10.1007/s00227-016-3066-9).

Record type: Article

Abstract

To help meet the high energy demands of raising the young, some seabirds alternate between short, frequent foraging trips to maximize food delivery to the young, and infrequent, long foraging trips that serve towards self-maintenance. Our study is the first to investigate the foraging behaviour of gentoo penguins at Marion Island, which we did through a combined use of GPS loggers and time-depth recorders. The shallow shelf between Marion and Prince Edward Islands proved to be an important foraging area, and penguins exploited this area using a novel foraging strategy. Penguins undertook alternating trips of relatively short and long durations. Short trips, performed in the afternoon, were likely associated with self-maintenance as they were followed by roosting on the beach overnight and not returning to the colony. They were followed by longer and more distant foraging trips, after which birds returned to the colony to provision chicks. To our knowledge, this is the first study to demonstrate alternating trip lengths in gentoo penguins and the first to associate short trips with self-maintenance in seabirds. We suggest that due to the close proximity of a predictable foraging area for these penguins at Marion Island, there is minimal energetic cost to return to land after self-provisioning. Hence, unlike other seabirds that feed at greater distances from their breeding colonies, gentoo penguins are afforded the opportunity for short self-maintenance trips. Finally, we argue that these birds may be using this novel strategy due to sub-optimal feeding conditions resulting from environmental change.

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More information

Published date: 30 January 2017
Additional Information: Funding Information: We thank all the field personnel who assisted with the deployment and retrieval of instruments, with special mention of Vonica Perold, Geneveive Moroke, Alexis Osborne and Zuko Nkomo. Research on Marion Island is made possible through the logistical support from the Department of Environmental Affairs and financial support from the South African National Antarctic Programme. We are most grateful for funding received from the National Research Foundation (South Africa). RRR was supported by a National Research Foundation SANCOR post-doctoral fellowship (Grant Number 94916). Funding Information: Funding for this project was provided by the South African National Antarctic Programme, National Research Foundation (1. Grant number: SNA14073082526 awarded to Dr Pierre Pistorius; 2. Grant number SNA2005060800001 awarded to Dr Rob Crawford). Publisher Copyright: © 2017, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg. Copyright: Copyright 2018 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 455017
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/455017
ISSN: 0025-3162
PURE UUID: 4f56f3fd-0a31-456f-b3a1-5c3f14129e63
ORCID for Ryan R. Reisinger: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8933-6875

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Date deposited: 03 Mar 2022 17:48
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:03

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Contributors

Author: Tegan Carpenter-Kling
Author: Jonathan M. Handley
Author: David B. Green
Author: Azwainewi B. Makhado
Author: Robert J.M. Crawford
Author: Pierre A. Pistorius

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