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Fine-scale drivers of African Penguin prey dynamics in Algoa Bay, South Africa, and their impacts on penguin foraging ecology

African Penguins (Spheniscus demersus) have undergone a dramatic decrease in their population since the turn of this century prompting the up-grading of their conservation status to 'endangered'. There is growing evidence that variation in the availability of their principle prey, pelagic shoaling f...

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Main Author: Mcinnes, Alistair McIntyre
Other Authors: Ryan, Peter
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mcinnes, Alistair McIntyre
author2 Ryan, Peter
author_browse Mcinnes, Alistair McIntyre
Ryan, Peter
author_facet Ryan, Peter
Mcinnes, Alistair McIntyre
author_sort Mcinnes, Alistair McIntyre
collection Thesis
description African Penguins (Spheniscus demersus) have undergone a dramatic decrease in their population since the turn of this century prompting the up-grading of their conservation status to 'endangered'. There is growing evidence that variation in the availability of their principle prey, pelagic shoaling fish, are driving this trend. This prey variability is driven by oceanographic factors as well as commercial purse-seine fishing operations. To isolate the direct impacts of fishing on the foraging performance of African Penguins, the primary oceanographic drivers of fish distribution and abundance were investigated by conducting fine-scale pelagic fish surveys around two of the largest breeding colonies of African Penguins in Algoa Bay, St Croix and Bird islands, between 2011 and 2014. Quantification of fish parameters were facilitated by a novel method using a recreational fishfinder and calibrating this instrument to a conventional scientific device. The specific types of fish assemblages selected for by African Penguins were then evaluated by looking at the correspondence in associations of fish and penguins recorded at sea using both counts and locations of foraging birds tracked simultaneously during a subset of fish surveys. Activity budgets of penguins calculated from these simultaneous deployments were modelled against the abundance of their prey to elucidate hypothesised functional relationships. Finally, the direct influence of purse-seine fishing on both targeted fish assemblages and penguin activity budgets were assessed by modelling interactions between known physical drivers of targeted fish assemblages and different levels of cumulative catches. Physical drivers of the three-dimensional distribution and abundance of fish varied between colonies with primary production playing the most important role around Bird Island but having little influence on fish around St Croix Island where factors associated with surface and sea-profile temperatures had a stronger influence. Results of both penguin count and track data highlight the importance of the vertical distribution of prey to the distribution of foraging African Penguins with the abundance of these assemblages having a significant influence on this species' activity budgets. Evidence for local depletion of pelagic fish was demonstrated for the waters around St Croix Island and the effects of purse-seine fishing on African Penguin foraging effort were significant when controlling for natural drivers of prey distribution. Results of this research should be applied to current conservation measures, most notably alleviating direct competition by purse-seine fishing operations during periods of reduced primary productivity and when the abundance of targeted fish aggregations are significantly diminished three months prior to and during the onset of the African Penguin breeding season.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:07.122Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
publishDateSort 2017
publisher Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology
publisherStr Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/23408 Fine-scale drivers of African Penguin prey dynamics in Algoa Bay, South Africa, and their impacts on penguin foraging ecology Mcinnes, Alistair McIntyre Ryan, Peter Pichegru, Lorien Lacerda, Miguel Ornithology African Penguins (Spheniscus demersus) have undergone a dramatic decrease in their population since the turn of this century prompting the up-grading of their conservation status to 'endangered'. There is growing evidence that variation in the availability of their principle prey, pelagic shoaling fish, are driving this trend. This prey variability is driven by oceanographic factors as well as commercial purse-seine fishing operations. To isolate the direct impacts of fishing on the foraging performance of African Penguins, the primary oceanographic drivers of fish distribution and abundance were investigated by conducting fine-scale pelagic fish surveys around two of the largest breeding colonies of African Penguins in Algoa Bay, St Croix and Bird islands, between 2011 and 2014. Quantification of fish parameters were facilitated by a novel method using a recreational fishfinder and calibrating this instrument to a conventional scientific device. The specific types of fish assemblages selected for by African Penguins were then evaluated by looking at the correspondence in associations of fish and penguins recorded at sea using both counts and locations of foraging birds tracked simultaneously during a subset of fish surveys. Activity budgets of penguins calculated from these simultaneous deployments were modelled against the abundance of their prey to elucidate hypothesised functional relationships. Finally, the direct influence of purse-seine fishing on both targeted fish assemblages and penguin activity budgets were assessed by modelling interactions between known physical drivers of targeted fish assemblages and different levels of cumulative catches. Physical drivers of the three-dimensional distribution and abundance of fish varied between colonies with primary production playing the most important role around Bird Island but having little influence on fish around St Croix Island where factors associated with surface and sea-profile temperatures had a stronger influence. Results of both penguin count and track data highlight the importance of the vertical distribution of prey to the distribution of foraging African Penguins with the abundance of these assemblages having a significant influence on this species' activity budgets. Evidence for local depletion of pelagic fish was demonstrated for the waters around St Croix Island and the effects of purse-seine fishing on African Penguin foraging effort were significant when controlling for natural drivers of prey distribution. Results of this research should be applied to current conservation measures, most notably alleviating direct competition by purse-seine fishing operations during periods of reduced primary productivity and when the abundance of targeted fish aggregations are significantly diminished three months prior to and during the onset of the African Penguin breeding season. 2017-01-26T13:37:32Z 2017-01-26T13:37:32Z 2016 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/23408 eng application/pdf Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Ornithology
Mcinnes, Alistair McIntyre
Fine-scale drivers of African Penguin prey dynamics in Algoa Bay, South Africa, and their impacts on penguin foraging ecology
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Fine-scale drivers of African Penguin prey dynamics in Algoa Bay, South Africa, and their impacts on penguin foraging ecology
title_full Fine-scale drivers of African Penguin prey dynamics in Algoa Bay, South Africa, and their impacts on penguin foraging ecology
title_fullStr Fine-scale drivers of African Penguin prey dynamics in Algoa Bay, South Africa, and their impacts on penguin foraging ecology
title_full_unstemmed Fine-scale drivers of African Penguin prey dynamics in Algoa Bay, South Africa, and their impacts on penguin foraging ecology
title_short Fine-scale drivers of African Penguin prey dynamics in Algoa Bay, South Africa, and their impacts on penguin foraging ecology
title_sort fine scale drivers of african penguin prey dynamics in algoa bay south africa and their impacts on penguin foraging ecology
topic Ornithology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/23408
work_keys_str_mv AT mcinnesalistairmcintyre finescaledriversofafricanpenguinpreydynamicsinalgoabaysouthafricaandtheirimpactsonpenguinforagingecology