Author:
Collins M.,Cullen J. M.,Dann P.
Abstract
Little penguins, Eudyptula minor, from a breeding colony
on Phillip Island, Victoria were radio-tracked at sea during incubation,
chick-rearing and non-breeding periods from 1991 to 1993. Their locations,
which we have assumed to reflect foraging movements, varied according to
season and breeding activities, and there were marked differences from year to
year. Duration and distance of trips ranged from single day-trips a few
kilometres from Phillip Island, typically during the breeding season, to
longer trips outside the breeding season up to 500 km away lasting more than a
month, but 95% of all birds located were within 20 km of the coast. In
the breeding season foraging trips averaged 4.4 days during incubation
compared with 2.1 days when there were chicks in the nest; in the non-breeding
period foraging trips took 5.2 days on average. The duration of trips for
adults feeding chicks increased with the age of the chicks. Birds from nests
on the north and south sides of Phillip Island differed in their use of areas
close to the island, but showed a similar distribution on more distant trips.
The location of foraging trips is discussed in relation to information on the
abundance of prey species of fish within the foraging range of the birds.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
81 articles.
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