Foraging niche overlap during chick-rearing in the sexually dimorphic Westland petrel
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Most Procellariform seabirds are pelagic, breed in summer when prey availability peaks, and migrate for winter. They also display a dual foraging strategy (short and long trips) and sex-specific foraging. The Westland petrel Procellaria westlandica, a New Zealand endemic, is one of the rare seabirds breeding in winter. Preliminary findings on this large and sexually-dimorphic petrel suggest a foraging with no evidence of a dual strategy, within a narrow range and with shared areas between sexes. To investigate further this unusual strategy, the present study determined the fine-scale at-sea behaviours (GPS and accelerometer data loggers) and trophic niches (stable isotopes in whole blood) of chick-rearing individuals (16 males, 13 females). All individuals foraged on the shelf slope of the west coast of New Zealand’s South Island with short, unimodal trips. Both sexes foraged at similar intensity without temporal, spatial or isotopic niche segregation. These findings suggest the presence of a winter prey resource close to the colony, sufficient to satisfy the nutritional needs of breeding without intra-specific competition avoidance or increased foraging effort. Additional data are needed to assess the consistency of foraging niche between the sexes and its reproductive outcomes in view of anticipated environmental changes.
Citations (2)
Cited on 01 January 2026
Weight: 1.00
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.191511DataCite MDC OpenAlex
Cited on 01 November 2020
Weight: 1.00
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Publication Details
Subfield
Nature and Landscape Conservation
Field
Environmental Science
Domain
Physical Sciences
Confidence Score
43%
Source
Scholar Data Model