The foraging behaviour of Chinstrap Penguins Pygoscelis antarctica at Ardley Island, Antarctica
The foraging behaviour of 20 Chinstrap Penguins Pygoscelis antarctica breeding at Ardley Island, King George Island, Antarctica was studied during the austral summers of 1991/2 and 1995/6 using stomach temperature loggers (to determine feeding patterns), depth recorders and multiple channel loggers....
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Marine Ornithology
1999
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Online Access: | https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/1780/ https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/1780/1/10.1.1.669.8285.pdf |
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ftoceanrep:oai:oceanrep.geomar.de:1780 2024-09-30T14:26:16+00:00 The foraging behaviour of Chinstrap Penguins Pygoscelis antarctica at Ardley Island, Antarctica Wilson, Rory P. Peters, Gerrit 1999 text https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/1780/ https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/1780/1/10.1.1.669.8285.pdf en eng Marine Ornithology https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/1780/1/10.1.1.669.8285.pdf Wilson, R. P. and Peters, G. (1999) The foraging behaviour of Chinstrap Penguins Pygoscelis antarctica at Ardley Island, Antarctica. Open Access Marine Ornithology, 27 . pp. 85-95. cc_by_3.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Article PeerReviewed 1999 ftoceanrep 2024-09-04T05:04:40Z The foraging behaviour of 20 Chinstrap Penguins Pygoscelis antarctica breeding at Ardley Island, King George Island, Antarctica was studied during the austral summers of 1991/2 and 1995/6 using stomach temperature loggers (to determine feeding patterns), depth recorders and multiple channel loggers. The multiple channel loggers recorded dive depth, swim speed and swim heading which could be integrated using vectors to determine the foraging tracks. Half the birds left the island to forage between 02h00 and 10h00. Mean time at sea was 10.6 h. Birds generally executed a looping type course with most individuals foraging within 20 km of the island. Maximum foraging range was 33.5 km. Maximum dive depth was 100.7 m although 80% of all dives had depth maxima less than 30 m. The following dive parameters were positively related to maximum depth reached during the dive: total dive duration, descent duration, duration at the bottom of the dive, ascent duration, descent angle, ascent angle, rate of change of depth during descent and rate of change of depth during ascent. Swim speed was unrelated to maximum dive depth and had mean values of 2.6, 2.5 and 2.2 m/s for the descent, bottom and ascent phases of the dive. The sequence of maximum depths reached in a dive series was not random, tending to be concentrated at a particular depth, irrespective of whether the penguins were feeding at that depth or not. Generally, sequential dives to a specific depth were abruptly terminated by a single dive to another depth which was characteristic in having no bottom phase and unusually steep descent and ascent angles. The maximum depth reached during this dive was then adhered to in the next dive sequence. There were peaks in feeding activity between 06h00 and 09h00 and 14h00 and 22h00. Although foraging effort and relative success decreased around midnight when light intensity was lowest, birds did dive up to 22 m at this time, considerably deeper than sympatric Adélie P. adeliae or Gentoo P. papua Penguins. These findings indicate ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica Ardley Island King George Island Pygoscelis antarctica OceanRep (GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre für Ocean Research Kiel) Ardley ENVELOPE(-58.953,-58.953,-62.201,-62.201) Ardley Island ENVELOPE(-58.933,-58.933,-62.213,-62.213) Austral King George Island |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
OceanRep (GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre für Ocean Research Kiel) |
op_collection_id |
ftoceanrep |
language |
English |
description |
The foraging behaviour of 20 Chinstrap Penguins Pygoscelis antarctica breeding at Ardley Island, King George Island, Antarctica was studied during the austral summers of 1991/2 and 1995/6 using stomach temperature loggers (to determine feeding patterns), depth recorders and multiple channel loggers. The multiple channel loggers recorded dive depth, swim speed and swim heading which could be integrated using vectors to determine the foraging tracks. Half the birds left the island to forage between 02h00 and 10h00. Mean time at sea was 10.6 h. Birds generally executed a looping type course with most individuals foraging within 20 km of the island. Maximum foraging range was 33.5 km. Maximum dive depth was 100.7 m although 80% of all dives had depth maxima less than 30 m. The following dive parameters were positively related to maximum depth reached during the dive: total dive duration, descent duration, duration at the bottom of the dive, ascent duration, descent angle, ascent angle, rate of change of depth during descent and rate of change of depth during ascent. Swim speed was unrelated to maximum dive depth and had mean values of 2.6, 2.5 and 2.2 m/s for the descent, bottom and ascent phases of the dive. The sequence of maximum depths reached in a dive series was not random, tending to be concentrated at a particular depth, irrespective of whether the penguins were feeding at that depth or not. Generally, sequential dives to a specific depth were abruptly terminated by a single dive to another depth which was characteristic in having no bottom phase and unusually steep descent and ascent angles. The maximum depth reached during this dive was then adhered to in the next dive sequence. There were peaks in feeding activity between 06h00 and 09h00 and 14h00 and 22h00. Although foraging effort and relative success decreased around midnight when light intensity was lowest, birds did dive up to 22 m at this time, considerably deeper than sympatric Adélie P. adeliae or Gentoo P. papua Penguins. These findings indicate ... |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Wilson, Rory P. Peters, Gerrit |
spellingShingle |
Wilson, Rory P. Peters, Gerrit The foraging behaviour of Chinstrap Penguins Pygoscelis antarctica at Ardley Island, Antarctica |
author_facet |
Wilson, Rory P. Peters, Gerrit |
author_sort |
Wilson, Rory P. |
title |
The foraging behaviour of Chinstrap Penguins Pygoscelis antarctica at Ardley Island, Antarctica |
title_short |
The foraging behaviour of Chinstrap Penguins Pygoscelis antarctica at Ardley Island, Antarctica |
title_full |
The foraging behaviour of Chinstrap Penguins Pygoscelis antarctica at Ardley Island, Antarctica |
title_fullStr |
The foraging behaviour of Chinstrap Penguins Pygoscelis antarctica at Ardley Island, Antarctica |
title_full_unstemmed |
The foraging behaviour of Chinstrap Penguins Pygoscelis antarctica at Ardley Island, Antarctica |
title_sort |
foraging behaviour of chinstrap penguins pygoscelis antarctica at ardley island, antarctica |
publisher |
Marine Ornithology |
publishDate |
1999 |
url |
https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/1780/ https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/1780/1/10.1.1.669.8285.pdf |
long_lat |
ENVELOPE(-58.953,-58.953,-62.201,-62.201) ENVELOPE(-58.933,-58.933,-62.213,-62.213) |
geographic |
Ardley Ardley Island Austral King George Island |
geographic_facet |
Ardley Ardley Island Austral King George Island |
genre |
Antarc* Antarctica Ardley Island King George Island Pygoscelis antarctica |
genre_facet |
Antarc* Antarctica Ardley Island King George Island Pygoscelis antarctica |
op_relation |
https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/1780/1/10.1.1.669.8285.pdf Wilson, R. P. and Peters, G. (1999) The foraging behaviour of Chinstrap Penguins Pygoscelis antarctica at Ardley Island, Antarctica. Open Access Marine Ornithology, 27 . pp. 85-95. |
op_rights |
cc_by_3.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess |
_version_ |
1811646682201325568 |