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Fine-scale foraging behaviour of southern Buller’s albatross, the only Thalassarche that provisions chicks through winter

journal contribution
posted on 2019-08-01, 00:00 authored by Timothee Antonin Poupart, S M Waugh, C M Miskelly, A Kato, Lauren Angel, K M Rogers, John ArnouldJohn Arnould
© Inter-Research 2019. Predators generally time their reproductive events to match the peak in prey resource availability in order to sustain the elevated energy requirement of offspring provisioning. Consequently, most temperate/polar seabirds breed in spring/summer, including the majority of small albatross species that have short breeding cycles. In contrast, the southern Buller’s albatross Thalassarche bulleri bulleri has a delayed breeding schedule, with chick-rearing extending throughout the entire austral winter. In the present study, the fine-scale at-sea movements and trophic niche of chick-rearing southern Buller’s albatross were determined at Hautere/Solander Island (New Zealand, 46° 35’ S, 166° 54’ E) during the 2016 and 2017 chick-rearing periods to investigate the winter foraging strategy used during this nominally challenging period. The tracks recorded by 15 males (n = 43) and 11 females (n = 21) revealed that foraging behaviour accounted for only a small proportion of time at sea, primarily influenced by the time of day. Foraging occurred mainly in the neritic waters of New Zealand’s South Island shelf, with individuals undertaking consistent short trips (£ 230 km from the colony) or alternating short and long trips up to 1500 km from the colony. Fine-scale tracking data revealed that males spent more time foraging, during shorter trips than females. Their isotopic niches were small, with overlap between sexes, but with males having higher d15N values than females. Time spent foraging was influenced by both static and dynamic oceanographic variables. These findings suggest that southern Buller’s albatross foraging behaviour, despite having to sustain chick provisioning in winter, is similar to that of summer-breeding congeners.

History

Journal

Marine ecology progress series

Volume

625

Pagination

163 - 179

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Publisher

Location

Oldendorf, Germany

ISSN

0171-8630

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2019, Inter-Research