Foraging conditions for breeding penguins improve with distance from colony and progression of the breeding season at the South Orkney Islands.
Jessica Ann PhillipsAnnette L FayetTim GuilfordFabrizio MancoVictoria Warwick-EvansPhil TrathanPublished in: Movement ecology (2021)
These results suggest chinstrap penguin foraging strategies are influenced by both breeding stage and prey distribution, and the low patch quality near the colony may be due to a combination of depletion by intraspecific competition but compensated by natural variation in prey. Reduced trip durations towards the end of the incubation period may be due to an increase in food availability, as seabirds time their reproduction so that the period of maximum energy demand in late chick-rearing coincides with maximum resource availability in the environment. This may also explain why patch quality around the colony improved over the breeding season. Overall, our study sheds light on drivers of foraging decisions in colonial seabirds, an important question in foraging ecology.