Emperor penguins use sea ice to rest between long foraging periods
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For the first time, researchers tracking the behavior of emperor penguins near the sea have identified the importance of sea ice for the penguins' feeding habits. The research, published November 21 in the open access journal PLOS ONE by Shinichi Watanabe from Fukuyama University, Japan and colleagues, Japan describes emperor penguin foraging behavior through the birds' chick-rearing season. Unlike other species like Adelie penguins, emperor penguins spent much more time diving for food, and only used about 30% of their time at sea to take short breaks to rest on sea ice. The birds did not travel for long distances on the ice, or use it for other activities. The study also suggests that these short rest periods on sea ice may help the penguins avoid predators such as leopard seals.
Though sea ice conditions are known to affect penguin populations, the relationship between ice levels and penguins' foraging has been unclear because of the difficulties of tracking the birds at sea. Watanabe says, "The monitoring technique developed in this study will help to understand the relationship."
Source: Public Library of Science
Other sources
- Emperor penguins budget time for short rests on ice during chick-rearing seasonfrom Science DailyThu, 22 Nov 2012, 3:00:44 UTC
- Ice critical for emperor penguin foragingfrom MSNBC: ScienceThu, 22 Nov 2012, 0:00:25 UTC
- Emperor penguins use sea ice to rest between long foraging periodsfrom PhysorgWed, 21 Nov 2012, 22:31:17 UTC
- Last One In Is A Dead Penguin - Sea Ice Survival Groupthink | Videofrom Live ScienceWed, 21 Nov 2012, 22:30:30 UTC
- Emperor Penguins Need Sea Ice for Foragingfrom Live ScienceWed, 21 Nov 2012, 22:30:25 UTC