AI Article Synopsis

  • Southern giant petrels are significant predators in the southern hemisphere, known primarily for scavenging pinnipeds and penguins, although they occasionally attack live penguins.
  • A recent study observed a trio of giant petrels attempting to prey on a molting adult Magellanic penguin at Punta Tombo, Argentina, indicating a shift in their feeding behavior.
  • The findings suggest that live penguins, including fledglings and adults, may form a more substantial part of the giant petrel's diet than previously believed, highlighting a potential specialized predation strategy.

Article Abstract

Southern giant petrels () are important consumers that range across the oceans throughout the southern hemisphere. In Argentina, previous studies have shown they eat primarily pinnipeds and penguins, which they are assumed to scavenge, although there are occasional anecdotes of them attacking living penguins. Here we describe a predation attempt by a trio of southern giant petrels on a molting adult Magellanic penguin () at the large colony at Punta Tombo, Argentina. We relate giant petrel attendance patterns at the colony to the penguins' phenology, showing how giant petrel numbers rise with the increasing prevalence of vulnerable penguins. We suggest that living penguins-both fledglings and adults-may constitute a more seasonally significant proportion of the giant petrel diet than previously assumed, and their capture may represent a specialized predation technique.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11043616PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.11258DOI Listing

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