4.3 Article

Diet plasticity and links to changing foraging behaviour in the conservation of subantarctic yellow-eyed penguins (Megadyptes antipodes)

期刊

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/aqc.3797

关键词

Auckland Islands; benthic diving; carbon isotope; climate change; El Nino southern oscillation; GPS logger; nitrogen isotope; pelagic diving; stable isotope analysis; time depth recorder

资金

  1. Massey University PhD Scholarship
  2. Massey University Research Funding
  3. Institute of Veterinary, Animal and Biomedical Sciences Post-graduate studies grant
  4. Birds New Zealand Research Fund

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Diet is a key factor affecting seabird foraging behavior and breeding success. Research on yellow-eyed penguins in the subantarctic region found significant changes in diet under different years and climate conditions, suggesting prey availability as a major limiting factor for survival and breeding success.
Diet is a key factor affecting seabird foraging behaviour, ultimately influencing survival, breeding success and long-term population viability. The density and distribution of prey species in the marine environment are influenced by many factors including climate effects such as El Nino southern oscillation and climate change that alter water temperature. While poor quality diet has been implicated as a contributing factor in the decline of some mainland New Zealand yellow-eyed penguin (Megadyptes antipodes) populations, little is known about their diet in the subantarctic where the majority of the species breeds. Blood and feather samples (n = 63) were collected for stable isotope analysis of diet from 25 individual birds breeding on subantarctic Enderby Island, Auckland Islands, New Zealand, from 2015 to 2018. Diet data were analysed by factors such as breeding year, sex and foraging behaviour. Stable isotope analysis demonstrated significant changes in diet during each year of the study, which included both El Nino and La Nina conditions. Diet during El Nino conditions comprised lower trophic level prey, which were more benthic, and found closer to shore than diet during La Nina. Coupled with the reported variable breeding success of yellow-eyed penguins in the subantarctic, variable diet suggests prey availability is likely to be a limiting factor in some years. Prey availability is therefore expected to be a major influence on survival and breeding success of this endangered species in the future, particularly if the effects of climate change become more pronounced. This research highlights an urgent conservation need to identify prey species utilized by the southern population, along with their distribution in time and space, and therefore also the effect of diet on long-term population stability.

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