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The foraging distribution and habitat use of chick-rearing snow petrels from two colonies in Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica

Honan, Eleanor Maedhbh ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4163-1610; Wakefield, Ewan D.; Phillips, Richard ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0208-1444; Grecian, W. James; Prince, Stephanie; Robert, Henri; Descamps, Sébastien; Rix, Anna; Hoelzel, A. Rus; McClymont, Erin L.. 2025 The foraging distribution and habitat use of chick-rearing snow petrels from two colonies in Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica. Marine Biology, 172 (7), 109. 17, pp. 10.1007/s00227-025-04657-w

Abstract
The polar sea-ice zones are highly productive and seasonal habitats that support large populations of vertebrate predators. In the Antarctic, snow petrels ( Pagodroma nivea ) are regarded as highly ice-dependant, yet knowledge of their habitat use and foraging distribution during the breeding period comes largely from ship-based observations. Snow petrels show sexual size dimorphism, and previous studies have demonstrated a degree of sexual segregation in habitat use in East Antarctica during the incubation period. Here, we characterise the movements, behaviour and habitat use of foraging snow petrels using bird movement and remotely sensed environmental data. We tracked snow petrels from two colonies in Dronning Maud Land, East Antarctica during early chick rearing in January to February 2022, a period of unusually rapid sea-ice retreat in the region. During the chick-rearing period, mean foraging range was c. 395 km and did not differ between the sexes. However, we found some evidence of differing habitat use between the sexes: males foraged more in areas of higher sea-ice concentration and over the continental shelf, while females utilized deeper waters and lower sea-ice concentrations. Sexes also diverged in their behavioural responses to both sea ice and depths, with males more likely to switch to foraging in areas of higher sea-ice concentrations than females and females more likely to switch to foraging in deeper waters than males. Although both sexes were more likely to forage at higher sea-ice concentrations, they also used areas with little or no sea ice. This contrasts with previous studies and may have been due to the unusual paucity of sea-ice cover during our tracking period.
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Programmes:
BAS Programmes 2015 > Ecosystems
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