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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
We integrated information from satellite transmitters, GPS loggers and wet/dry activity
loggers to compare the at-sea behaviour of 4 sympatric albatross species by night and day: wandering
Diomedea exulans, grey-headed Thalassarche chrysostoma, black-browed T. melanophrys and
light-mantled sooty Phoebetria palpebrata (in total, 350 foraging trips by 101 individuals). Trip duration,
distance and maximum range varied more within species between stages (incubation, broodguard
and post-brood) than between species at the same stage, implying that reproductive constraints
are more important than interspecific competition in shaping foraging behaviour. Wandering
albatrosses spent more time on the water in fewer, longer bouts than other species. The proportion of
time spent on the water was similar among the 3 smaller species. The partitioning of foraging activity
between day and night varied little between species: all landed and took off more often, but spent
less time overall on the water during the day than at night. This supports observations that albatrosses
forage most actively during daylight, even though many of their fish and squid prey approach
the surface only at night. Albatrosses were more active on bright moonlit nights, seem to have no
fixed daily requirement for sleep, rest or digestion time on the water, can navigate in darkness, and
are probably unhindered by the slight reduction in mean wind strength at night. They are probably
less active at night because their ability to see and capture prey from the air is reduced and it is then
more energy-efficient for them to rest or to catch prey using a ‘sit-and-wait’ foraging strategy.
Description
Keywords
Activity patterns Procellariiformes Seabird Diel cycle Lunar rhythm Bird island South Georgia
Citation
Marine Ecology Progress Series, 340, 271-286