Foraging habitat and performances of King penguins Aptenodytes patagonicus Miller, 1778 at Kerguelen islands in relation to climatic variability ...

Understanding how climate change affects the foraging ecology of key marine predators is an important issue in the study of Southern Ocean food webs. Since 1998, we have conducted a long term research program on the foraging ecology of a top-diving predator, the King penguin Aptenodytes patagonicus,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bost, Charles-André, Goarant, Anne, Scheffer, Annette, Koubbi, Philippe, Duhamel, Guy, Charrassin, Jean-Benoît
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Cybium 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.26028/cybium/2011-35sp-023
http://sfi-cybium.fr/fr/foraging-habitat-and-performances-king-penguins-aptenodytes-patagonicus-miller-1778-kerguelen
Description
Summary:Understanding how climate change affects the foraging ecology of key marine predators is an important issue in the study of Southern Ocean food webs. Since 1998, we have conducted a long term research program on the foraging ecology of a top-diving predator, the King penguin Aptenodytes patagonicus, simultaneously at Kerguelen and Crozet Islands with the support of the IPEV (Institut Polaire Français). King penguin is one of the most important predatory birds at Kerguelen. In summer, they forage preferentially along large-scale physical features and use the three dimensions of hydrographic features to feed on myctophid fishes (the penguins’ main prey and a major prey species in the Southern Ocean). Primarily, this study aims to evaluate how the change in foraging parameters and success of penguins reflect the impact of oceanographic conditions on key food webs in the polar frontal zone. Each summer, breeding (incubation and brooding) penguins from the Ratmanoff colony (Courbet Peninsula, Kerguelen; 100 000 ...