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Factors driving Adélie penguin chick size, mass and condition at colonies of different sizes in the Southern Ross Sea

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Title Factors driving Adélie penguin chick size, mass and condition at colonies of different sizes in the Southern Ross Sea
Names Whitehead, Amy L. (creator)
Lyver, Phil O'B. (creator)
Ballard, Grant (creator)
Barton, Kerry (creator)
Karl, Brian J. (creator)
Dugger, Katie M. (creator)
Jennings, Scott (creator)
Lescroël, Amelie (creator)
Wilson, Peter R. (creator)
Ainley, David G. (creator)
Date Issued 2015-03-16 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Inter-Research and can be found at: http://www.int-res.com/journals/meps/meps-home/.
Abstract Body size, mass and condition can affect an organism’s ability to cope with variation
in resource availability or metabolic demand, particularly as juveniles reach independence. It
follows that changes to parental provisioning efficiency (size and frequency of meals) through
intraspecific competition or environmental conditions that affect prey availability may affect chick
size, mass and condition and ultimately post-fledging survival. We examined how Adélie penguin
chick size, mass and condition varied among colonies of different sizes on Ross Island during a
15 yr period of high environmental variability and varying intraspecific competition. Aiding the
study was a natural experiment in which the presence of 2 giant icebergs midway through the
study abnormally increased sea ice concentration (SIC), altering adults’ access to food. Concurrently,
the colonies were rapidly increasing in size; based on previous work, this indicated
increased trophic competition near colonies, a trend likely indicating a changing food web in the
greater region. Results showed that increased amounts of sea ice, which reduced the ability of
adults to access food, had a negative effect on the size and mass of chicks. However, a greater proportion
of fish (vs. krill) in the diet had a positive effect on chick size. Moreover, in some cases,
increased intraspecific competition may be a more important driver of provisioning rate and chick
size than abiotic factors, with chicks showing the effects of reduced food delivery at larger
colonies. Understanding these patterns will allow better understanding of how factors such as
climate change and altered food webs may affect Adélie penguin populations.
Genre Article
Topic Adélie penguin
Identifier Whitehead, A. L., Lyver, P. O., Ballard, G., Barton, K., Karl, B. J., Dugger, K. M., ... & Ainley, D. G. (2015). Factors driving Adélie penguin chick size, mass and condition at colonies of different sizes in the Southern Ross Sea. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 523, 199-213. doi:10.3354/meps11130

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