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MEPS 177:243-254 (1999)

Abstract

Exploitation of the marine environment by two sympatric albatrosses in the Pacific Southern Ocean

S. M. Waugh1,2,*, H. Weimerskirch1, Y. Cherel1, U. Shankar2, P. A. Prince3, P. M. Sagar2

1CNRS, CEBC, F-79360 Villiers en Bois, France
2NIWA, PO Box 8602, Christchurch, New Zealand
3British Antarctic Survey, Natural Environment Research Council, High Cross, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0ET, United Kingdom

*E-mail: susanwaugh@netscape.net

ABSTRACT: The marine habitat exploited by black-browed Diomedea melanophrys and grey-headed albatrosses D. chrysostoma breeding at Campbell Island, New Zealand, was studied using satellite telemetry. Data were analysed in relation to the bathymetry and sea-surface temperature of the foraging zones. Black-browed albatrosses spent 55% of their time on the Campbell Plateau but also carried out long foraging trips to the Polar Front and Antarctic Zone at a distance of over 2000 km. They relied heavily on juvenile Micromesistius australis, a schooling fish, during foraging trips to the shelf but over oceanic waters the squid Martialia hyadesi was the main prey taken. Grey-headed albatrosses spent 71% of their time foraging over the deep waters of the Polar Frontal Zone where M. hyadesi comprised over 90% of the mass of prey taken. No satellite-tracked birds fed over the shelf, but data from the duration of foraging trips and dietary analysis suggests that shelf-feeding is important for this species. Significant inter-species differences in the time spent in neritic and oceanic zones show that black-browed albatrosses are reliant primarily on shelf resources while grey-headed albatrosses are primarily oceanic feeders. In addition, the 2 species overlapped little in the zones used over oceanic waters, with black-browed albatrosses feeding in more southerly waters than grey-headed albatrosses. However, both species feed on M. hyadesi when foraging in association with the Polar Front.

KEY WORDS: Marine environmental · Albatross · Satellite tracking

Published in MEPS Vol. 177 (1999) on February 11
ISSN: 0171-8630. Copyright © Inter-Research, Oldendorf/Luhe, 1999

Copyright © 1999; Inter-Research Science Publisher
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