Additional information came from two accelerometers strapped to each bird that measured its head and body movements to calculate how fast it devoured its prey.
"We didn't really know if the penguins caught krill one-by-one. I'd thought that maybe they just got into their stomachs when they were after some other prey," Watanabe said. "But when we saw the footage it turned out the penguins were doing just that, eating these tiny little creatures one after the other."
Not only that, the penguins didn't swim randomly but hung poised on the edge of the ice until a thick swarm neared, then swooped into the water. Footage showed a penguin zooming under the ice and then deeper, its head snapping rapidly up as it fed.
The krill killing-rate was both fast and efficient. The penguins gobbled an average of two krill per second, consuming about 244 krill in roughly 90 minutes.
"I was so happy when I got the footage of a penguin going straight into a swarm of krill and gorging itself," Watanabe said.
Penguin research completed, Watanabe now aims to repeat the same exercise with sharks.
(Writing by Elaine Lies, Editing by Michael Perry)
- Link this
- Share this
- Digg this
- Email
- Reprints
0 comments:
Post a Comment