MEPS

Marine Ecology Progress Series

MEPS is a leading hybrid research journal on all aspects of marine, coastal and estuarine ecology. Priority is given to outstanding research that advances our ecological understanding.

Online: ISSN 1616-1599

Print: ISSN 0171-8630

DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/meps

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Volume contents
Mar Ecol Prog Ser 159:249-263 (1997)

Foraging space of emperor penguins Aptenodytes forsteri in Antarctic shelf waters in winter

ABSTRACT: To determine the foraging space of emperor penguins Aptenodytesforsteri in winter, 12 females from Auster colony (13400 pairs) were equipped with satellite transmitters and time-depth recorders before departing on their 76 ± 9 d winter (Juneto August) foraging trip. The females were also injected with tritiated water (HTO) to estimate food consumption, and non-instrumented females were stomach sampled upon return to the colony to determine their diet. The same data were collected inAugust/September from 3 males foraging after their 4 mo prenuptial and incubation fast. Both females and males foraged in pack-ice within 120 km of the colony along a relatively narrow band of the continental shelf in water depths ranging from 200 to 500m. Only rarely did penguins leave shelf waters to forage in deeper waters over the shelf break. The size of the general foraging area for females was about 11410 km2, but 50% of all foraging days were spent in only about 15% (1700km2) of the total foraging area. A female of average mass (25 kg) hunted for about 6 h d-1, and consumed 1.8 ± 0.3 kg of food per foraging day. This indicates that females from Auster consumed in winter about 1520 t, about half ofwhich is likely to have been taken from an area measuring only 60 x 28 km. Males were active for about 10 h d-1 and consumed about twice as much (3.7 ± 1.2 kg d-1 for a 24 kg male) as the females during the early phase of brooding.The diet of females comprised 72% fish (by mass), 16% squid and 12% Antarctic krill Euphausia superba whereas that of the males comprised 53% fish, 2% squid and 43% krill. Most foraging dives of females (81%) and males (64%) were to 200 m andlasted less about 3 min. Males dived deep (>300 m) more frequently than females (19.8% vs 0.1%) but the number of dives per day was similar for both sexes (27 ± 14 for winter females, 31 ± 15 for brood-stage males). The small foraging area, dietcomposition and prey harvest rates of the females provide indirect evidence of the availability of penguin prey species in the pack-ice off Auster in winter.

KEYWORDS

Barbara C. Wienecke (Co-author)

Graham Robertson (Co-author)