Friday, January 22, 2010

King penguins become fast food


King penguins become fast food for Antarctic fur seals
By Matt Walker
Editor, Earth News

Death in the water

Antarctic fur seals have been filmed catching and eating king penguins in the open ocean, behaviour not seen before.

Male Antarctic fur seals are known to occasionally take king penguins on land. But this is the first time seals have been observed chasing, killing and eating king penguins at sea. The preference for king-sized fast food has evolved among fur seals living at Possession Island in the Indian Ocean

Details of the behaviour are published in the journal Polar Biology.
Catching a king penguin at sea is not easy.

KING PENGUINS: FIND OUT MORE
King penguin

They can weigh up to 13kg at certain times of the year and are very fast moving in the water.

"Both species are very fast swimming and agile animals," says Dr Karine Delord of the French National Centre for Scientific Research, who observed the behaviour.

Usually, the penguins are predated upon by much larger leopard seals and orcas.

Fur seals are also known to prey on king penguins on the shore, a behaviour filmed by the BBC Planet Earth Series.

"But our observations add strength to the unique similar predation in the water," says Dr Delord.

She and her colleagues Dr Yohan Charbonnier and Dr Jean-Baptiste Thiebot were studying the conservation of penguins, sooty albatrosses and giant petrels around Possession Island, one of five small islands that make up the Crozet archipelago in the southern Indian Ocean. While located high up on top of a nearby cliff, they witnessed fur seals predating on king penguins below them in the sea on 17 occasions during five days.

Sometimes the penguins escape injured, sometimes they do not. The longest chase took five hours, when one male fur seal successively attacked at least ten king penguins. Though all were injured, each made it to the shore.

Later the researchers witnessed a fur seal killing and eating a king penguin at sea. "We found that predation on king penguins by Antarctic fur seals is more common and widespread than previously reported," says Dr Delord.

"It is too early to assess the impact of such behaviour because our observations need to be quantified on a longer period of time and other colonies of king penguins."


However, as seal numbers increase in the area, they could start to have a greater impact on small populations of king penguins.

FUR SEALS: FIND OUT MORE
Antarctic fur seal

"Furthermore, the impact on injured adults is probably more difficult to evaluate because some of them survive the attacks, at least a few days," she adds.

"But it is necessary to estimate the impact on their breeding and survival at a longer time."

Currently, 30,000 pairs of king penguins reside at the largest colony on Possession Island, while less than 500 seals live in the same area.
The fur seals are still recovering, after both species were nearly driven extinct by human hunters at Crozet during the 19th century.
So far, the researchers have not documented female Antarctic fur seals attacking king penguins at sea, though it is unclear why the females do not also hunt penguins.

At nearby Marion Island, where most documented attacks by Antarctic fur seals on shore-bound penguins occur, males, and particularly sub-adults males, are responsible.

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