Journal
MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
Volume 436, Issue -, Pages 273-289Publisher
INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/meps09242
Keywords
Adelie penguin; Climate change; Chick growth; Antarctic Peninsula
Categories
Funding
- National Science Foundation [ANT-0323254, OPP-9011927, OPP-9605596, OPP-0130525, OPP-0217282, OPP-0224727, OPP-052361, ANT-0523254]
- Office of Polar Programs (OPP)
- Directorate For Geosciences [823101] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
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An individual-based bioenergetics model that simulates the growth of an Adelie penguin Pygoscelis adeliae chick from hatching to fledging was used to assess marine and terrestrial factors that affect chick growth and fledging mass off the western Antarctic Peninsula. Simulations considered the effects on Adelie penguin fledging mass of (1) modification of chick diet through the addition of Antarctic silverfish Pleuragramma antarcticum to an all-Antarctic krill Euphausia superba diet, (2) reduction of provisioning rate which may occur as a result of an environmental stress such as reduced prey availability, and (3) increased thermoregulatory costs due to wetting of chicks which may result from increased precipitation or snow-melt in colonies. Addition of 17% Antarctic silverfish of Age-Class 3 yr (AC3) to a penguin chick diet composed of Antarctic krill increased chick fledging mass by 5%. Environmental stress that results in > 4% reduction in provisioning rate or wetting of just 10% of the chick's surface area decreased fledging mass enough to reduce the chick's probability of successful recruitment. The negative effects of reduced provisioning and wetting on chick growth can be compensated for by inclusion of Antarctic silverfish of AC3 and older in the chick diet. Results provide insight into climate-driven processes that influence chick growth and highlight a need for field research designed to investigate factors that determine the availability of AC3 and older Antarctic silverfish to foraging Adelie penguins and the influence of snowfall on chick wetting, thermoregulation and adult provisioning rate.
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