Provisioning Strategies of Antarctic Fur Seals and Chinstrap Penguins Produce Different Responses to Distribution of Common Prey and Habitat

Central-place foragers that must return to a breeding site to deliver food to offspring are faced with trade-offs between prey patch quality and distance from the colony. Among colonial animals, pinnipeds and seabirds may have different provisioning strategies, due to differences in their ability to...

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Main Authors: Ichii, Taro, Bengston, John, Boveng, Peter, Takao, Yoshimi, Jansen, John, Hiruki-Raring, Lisa, Cameron, Michael, Okamura, Hiroshi, Hayashi, Tomonari, Naganobu, Mikio
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/usdeptcommercepub/149
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/usdeptcommercepub/article/1147/viewcontent/Boveng_MEPS_2007_Provisioning_ZOMBIE.pdf
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spelling ftunivnebraskali:oai:digitalcommons.unl.edu:usdeptcommercepub-1147 2023-11-12T04:02:25+01:00 Provisioning Strategies of Antarctic Fur Seals and Chinstrap Penguins Produce Different Responses to Distribution of Common Prey and Habitat Ichii, Taro Bengston, John Boveng, Peter Takao, Yoshimi Jansen, John Hiruki-Raring, Lisa Cameron, Michael Okamura, Hiroshi Hayashi, Tomonari Naganobu, Mikio 2007-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/usdeptcommercepub/149 https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/usdeptcommercepub/article/1147/viewcontent/Boveng_MEPS_2007_Provisioning_ZOMBIE.pdf unknown DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/usdeptcommercepub/149 https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/usdeptcommercepub/article/1147/viewcontent/Boveng_MEPS_2007_Provisioning_ZOMBIE.pdf Publications, Agencies and Staff of the U.S. Department of Commerce Environmental Sciences text 2007 ftunivnebraskali 2023-10-30T10:43:04Z Central-place foragers that must return to a breeding site to deliver food to offspring are faced with trade-offs between prey patch quality and distance from the colony. Among colonial animals, pinnipeds and seabirds may have different provisioning strategies, due to differences in their ability to travel and store energy. We compared the foraging areas of lactating Antarctic fur seals and chinstrap penguins breeding at Seal Island, Antarctica, to investigate whether they responded differently to the distribution of their prey (Antarctic krill and myctophid fish) and spatial heterogeneity in their habitat. Dense krill concentrations occurred in the shelf region near the colony. However, only brooding penguins, which are expected to be time-minimizers because they must return frequently with whole food for their chicks, foraged mainly in this proximal shelf region. Lactating fur seals and incubating penguins, which can make longer trips to increase energy gain per trip, and so are expected to be energy-maximizers, foraged in the more distant (>20 km from the island) slope and oceanic regions. The shelf region was characterized by more abundant, but lower-energy-content immature krill, whereas the slope and oceanic regions had less abundant but higher-energy-content gravid krill, as well as high-energy-content myctophids. Furthermore, krill in the shelf region undertook diurnal vertical migration, whereas those in the slope and oceanic regions stayed near the surface throughout the day, which may enhance the capture rate for visual predators. Therefore, we sug- gest that the energy-maximizers foraged in distant, but potentially more profitable feeding regions, while the time-minimizers foraged in closer, but potentially less profitable regions. Thus, time and energy constraints derived from different provisioning strategies may result in sympatric colonial predator species using different foraging areas, and as a result, some central-place foragers use sub- optimal foraging habitats, in terms of the quality or ... Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Fur Seals Antarctic Krill Antarctica Seal Island University of Nebraska-Lincoln: DigitalCommons@UNL Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of Nebraska-Lincoln: DigitalCommons@UNL
op_collection_id ftunivnebraskali
language unknown
topic Environmental Sciences
spellingShingle Environmental Sciences
Ichii, Taro
Bengston, John
Boveng, Peter
Takao, Yoshimi
Jansen, John
Hiruki-Raring, Lisa
Cameron, Michael
Okamura, Hiroshi
Hayashi, Tomonari
Naganobu, Mikio
Provisioning Strategies of Antarctic Fur Seals and Chinstrap Penguins Produce Different Responses to Distribution of Common Prey and Habitat
topic_facet Environmental Sciences
description Central-place foragers that must return to a breeding site to deliver food to offspring are faced with trade-offs between prey patch quality and distance from the colony. Among colonial animals, pinnipeds and seabirds may have different provisioning strategies, due to differences in their ability to travel and store energy. We compared the foraging areas of lactating Antarctic fur seals and chinstrap penguins breeding at Seal Island, Antarctica, to investigate whether they responded differently to the distribution of their prey (Antarctic krill and myctophid fish) and spatial heterogeneity in their habitat. Dense krill concentrations occurred in the shelf region near the colony. However, only brooding penguins, which are expected to be time-minimizers because they must return frequently with whole food for their chicks, foraged mainly in this proximal shelf region. Lactating fur seals and incubating penguins, which can make longer trips to increase energy gain per trip, and so are expected to be energy-maximizers, foraged in the more distant (>20 km from the island) slope and oceanic regions. The shelf region was characterized by more abundant, but lower-energy-content immature krill, whereas the slope and oceanic regions had less abundant but higher-energy-content gravid krill, as well as high-energy-content myctophids. Furthermore, krill in the shelf region undertook diurnal vertical migration, whereas those in the slope and oceanic regions stayed near the surface throughout the day, which may enhance the capture rate for visual predators. Therefore, we sug- gest that the energy-maximizers foraged in distant, but potentially more profitable feeding regions, while the time-minimizers foraged in closer, but potentially less profitable regions. Thus, time and energy constraints derived from different provisioning strategies may result in sympatric colonial predator species using different foraging areas, and as a result, some central-place foragers use sub- optimal foraging habitats, in terms of the quality or ...
format Text
author Ichii, Taro
Bengston, John
Boveng, Peter
Takao, Yoshimi
Jansen, John
Hiruki-Raring, Lisa
Cameron, Michael
Okamura, Hiroshi
Hayashi, Tomonari
Naganobu, Mikio
author_facet Ichii, Taro
Bengston, John
Boveng, Peter
Takao, Yoshimi
Jansen, John
Hiruki-Raring, Lisa
Cameron, Michael
Okamura, Hiroshi
Hayashi, Tomonari
Naganobu, Mikio
author_sort Ichii, Taro
title Provisioning Strategies of Antarctic Fur Seals and Chinstrap Penguins Produce Different Responses to Distribution of Common Prey and Habitat
title_short Provisioning Strategies of Antarctic Fur Seals and Chinstrap Penguins Produce Different Responses to Distribution of Common Prey and Habitat
title_full Provisioning Strategies of Antarctic Fur Seals and Chinstrap Penguins Produce Different Responses to Distribution of Common Prey and Habitat
title_fullStr Provisioning Strategies of Antarctic Fur Seals and Chinstrap Penguins Produce Different Responses to Distribution of Common Prey and Habitat
title_full_unstemmed Provisioning Strategies of Antarctic Fur Seals and Chinstrap Penguins Produce Different Responses to Distribution of Common Prey and Habitat
title_sort provisioning strategies of antarctic fur seals and chinstrap penguins produce different responses to distribution of common prey and habitat
publisher DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln
publishDate 2007
url https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/usdeptcommercepub/149
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/usdeptcommercepub/article/1147/viewcontent/Boveng_MEPS_2007_Provisioning_ZOMBIE.pdf
geographic Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Fur Seals
Antarctic Krill
Antarctica
Seal Island
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Fur Seals
Antarctic Krill
Antarctica
Seal Island
op_source Publications, Agencies and Staff of the U.S. Department of Commerce
op_relation https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/usdeptcommercepub/149
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/usdeptcommercepub/article/1147/viewcontent/Boveng_MEPS_2007_Provisioning_ZOMBIE.pdf
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