4.0 Article

Diet of Imperial Cormorants Phalacrocorax atriceps Breeding at Central Patagonia, Argentina

Journal

WATERBIRDS
Volume 33, Issue 1, Pages 70-78

Publisher

WATERBIRD SOC
DOI: 10.1675/063.033.0108

Keywords

Argentina diet; Imperial Cormorant; Patagonia; Phalacrocarax atriceps

Categories

Funding

  1. Wildlife Conservation Society

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Diets of breeding Imperial Cormorants Phalacrocorax atriceps were studied at two breeding colonies Islas Blancas and Isla Arce located approximately 30 km apart in an area subject to increasing fishing pressure off Central Patagonia Argentina The goal was to assess differences between locations and diet variation among stages of the breeding cycle Pellet casts (403 and 358 pellets per colony respectively) were collected from November 2002 to February 2003 Analyses of the pellets revealed that Imperial Cormorants at Islas Blancas and Isla Arce fed on at least 25 and 23 prey types, respectively Fish showed the highest frequency of occurrence at both colonies (> 70%) followed by crustaceans and molluscs Of the fish prey Merluccius hubbsi (22 71%) Engraulis anchoita (16-51%) and Raneya brasiliensis (5-48%) showed the highest frequencies of occurrence depending on the colony and breeding stage At Islas Blancas the consumption of fish and crustaceans was similar among breeding stages (incubation young chicks and old chicks) while It was significantly different at Isla Arce Overall contribution by frequency of occurrence showed that M hubbsi was the most frequent prey at Islas Blancas (58%) and E anchoita and Pleoticus muelleri were more frequent at Isla Arce (48 and 45% respectively) Also overall contribution by mass of the main fish prey indicated differences between colonies Given the commercial value of the main prey species cormorant feeding requirements and spatial ecological needs should be Included as considerations in coastal fisheries management and future development Received 21 January 2009 accepted 25 April 2009

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