Visual observations of sea birds in the Southern Ocean in the 1979-1980 summer

Visual observations of sea birds in the Southern Ocean were carried out on board three ships during the austral summer of 1979-1980; two ships for exploratory fishing of krill, a factory ship SHINANO MARU and a trawler ORIENTO MARU, and one ship for the population census of minke whale, KYO MARU (a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yoshikuni Ohyama, Yasuhiko Naito, Kazue Nakamura
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Japanese
Published: National Institute of Polar Research 1981
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.15094/00008257
https://doaj.org/article/8e91bfcd1a2143569f11d8205ff46be6
Description
Summary:Visual observations of sea birds in the Southern Ocean were carried out on board three ships during the austral summer of 1979-1980; two ships for exploratory fishing of krill, a factory ship SHINANO MARU and a trawler ORIENTO MARU, and one ship for the population census of minke whale, KYO MARU (a catcher). The surveyed area was south of 63°S between 0°E and 115°E in longitude. Ten minutes within a day were allocated for bird observations. The species and the number of sea birds observed in ten minutes were recorded on a data sheet which was a slightly modified standard recording card of SCAR prepared for this survey. The bird species that occurred in a wide longitudinal range were the breeders on the Antarctic Continent or on the adjacent island in austral summer, i. e. antarctic petrel, snow petrel, cape pigeon, and Wilson's storm petrel. Light-mantled sooty albatross and sooty shearwater that are breeding on the sub-Antarctic islands also occurred in a wide range; these two birds are highly pelagic in habit and often disperse south to the edge of the pack ice in summer.