Behavioral Ecology 15: 824-830 (2004)
Patterns of energy acquisition by penguin: benefits of alternating short and long foraging trips
Ropert-Coudert Y, Wilson RP, Daunt F, Kato A
In some seabirds, foraging trips have been defined as either long or short, the length of time traveling to the foraging area being apparently a critical feature in determining foraging trip length. Using logger technology, together with complimentary data from published studies, we investigated traveling and foraging times in 18 free-living Adélie Penguins Pygoscelis adeliae, foraging for chicks. Most deep, foraging dives were distributed around the centre of the foraging trip. This central tendency was particularly apparent if the cumulative amount of undulations in the depth profile (indicative of prey capture) was considered during deep dives; values started to increase before 20.9% and ceased after 67.2% of the dives had occurred. This concentration of the feeding activity in the middle of the foraging trip indicates that birds travelled to and from a prey patch whose location varied little over the birds trips. These data form the basis for a simple model which uses travelling and foraging times together with projected rates of prey ingestion and chick and adult gastric emptying to determine that there are occasions when, in order to optimize rates of prey ingestion while at sea for both adults and chicks, birds should conduct foraging trips of bimodal lengths.
PG04-03
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