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1 December 2011 Diet of South Polar Skua Chicks in Two Areas of Sympatry with Brown Skua
Maricel Graña Grilli, Marcela Libertelli, Diego Montalti
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Abstract

The food provided to South Polar Skuas (Stercorarius maccormicki) chicks was determined at two Antarctic sites where South Polar Skuas breed sympatrically with Brown Skuas (S. antarcticus). At Harmony Point on Nelson Island, 16 samples of regurgitated stomach contents were analyzed, all contained remains of penguin chicks (mostly soft tissues), which constituted the bulk of the contents, while only two samples had fish or krill remains. These South Polar Skuas had access to penguin colonies, where they hunted chicks or fed on fresh carcasses. However, at Half Moon Island, only two out of nine samples contained minor amounts of penguin remains while fish were the major dietary resource. The high fish content in their diet may indicate a preference for marine rather than terrestrial resources or be the result of competition with Brown Skuas. The variability in food items evidenced by the differences in regurgitated stomach contents indicates that South Polar Skuas may have a trophic plasticity that allows them to change their feeding habits from one resource to another one according to availability. Such may make them less vulnerable to a reduction in the availability of a particular food item.

Maricel Graña Grilli, Marcela Libertelli, and Diego Montalti "Diet of South Polar Skua Chicks in Two Areas of Sympatry with Brown Skua," Waterbirds 34(4), 495-498, (1 December 2011). https://doi.org/10.1675/063.034.0412
Received: 11 March 2011; Accepted: 1 August 2011; Published: 1 December 2011
KEYWORDS
Antarctica
chick diet
Stercorarius antarcticus
Stercorarius maccormicki
stomach contents
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