(Press-News.org) Most little penguins may search for food in groups, and even synchronize their movements during foraging trips, according to a study published August 13, 2014 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Maud Berlincourt and John Arnould from Deakin University in Australia.
Little penguins are the smallest penguin species and they live exclusively in southern Australia, New Zealand, and the Chatham Islands, but spend most of their lives at sea in search of food. Not much is known about group foraging behavior in seabirds due to the difficulty in observing their remote feeding grounds. Scientists aiming to better understand this behavior used GPS-derived location and diving data to track at-sea foraging associations of little penguins during breeding season. Researchers gathered 84 separate foraging tracks and then categorized individual penguin associations into one of three groups: not associating with other penguins; associating when departing from or returning to the colony; or at sea when traveling or diving, including synchronized dives.
The authors found that ~ 70% of little penguins' foraging tracks were in association with other penguins, ~ 50% of individuals dove while associating with other penguins, and ~ 40% exhibited synchronous diving. These behaviors suggest little penguins forage in groups, may synchronize their underwater movements, and potentially cooperate to concentrate their small-schooling prey.
INFORMATION:
In your coverage please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper: http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0105065
Citation:
Berlincourt M, Arnould JPY (2014) At-Sea Associations in Foraging Little Penguins. PLoS ONE 9(8): e105065. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0105065
Funding:
Support was provided by: 1. ANZ Trustees Foundation - Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment (grant RM23947). 2. MA Ingram Trust Application (grant RM25024). 3. Birds Australia (grant RM23896). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.of Marine Biology and Aquarium to HCH. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
Competing Interests:
The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Little penguins forage together
Forty percent of studied penguins synchronized underwater movements while foraging
2014-08-13
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Young blue sharks use central North Atlantic nursery
2014-08-13
Blue sharks may use the central North Atlantic as a nursery prior to males and females moving through the ocean basin in distinctly different patterns, according to a study published August 13, 2014 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Frederic Vandeperre from University of the Azores, Portugal, and colleagues.
Shark populations typically organize by location and separate by sex and size, but these patterns remain poorly understood, particularly for exploited oceanic species such as the blue shark. The authors of this study employed a long-term electronic tagging experiment ...
Bacterial biosurgery shows promise for reducing the size of inoperable tumors
2014-08-13
Kansas City, MO. — Deep within most tumors lie areas that remain untouched by chemotherapy and radiation. These troublesome spots lack the blood and oxygen needed for traditional therapies to work, but provide the perfect target for a new cancer treatment using bacteria that thrive in oxygen-poor conditions. Now, researchers have shown that injections of a weakened version of one such anaerobic bacteria -- the microbe Clostridium novyi -- can shrink tumors in rats, pet dogs, and a human patient.
The findings from BioMed Valley Discoveries and a nationwide team of collaborators ...
Embalming study 'rewrites' key chapter in Egyptian history
2014-08-13
Researchers from the Universities of York, Macquarie and Oxford have discovered new evidence to suggest that the origins of mummification started in ancient Egypt 1,500 years earlier than previously thought.
The scientific findings of an 11-year study by a researcher in the Department of Archaeology at York, and York's BioArCh facility, and an Egyptologist from the Department of Ancient History at Macquarie University, push back the origins of a central and vital facet of ancient Egyptian culture by over a millennium.
Traditional theories on ancient Egyptian mummification ...
Injected bacteria shrink tumors in rats, dogs and humans
2014-08-13
A modified version of the Clostridium novyi (C. noyvi-NT) bacterium can produce a strong and precisely targeted anti-tumor response in rats, dogs and now humans, according to a new report from Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center researchers.
In its natural form, C. novyi is found in the soil and, in certain cases, can cause tissue-damaging infection in cattle, sheep and humans. The microbe thrives only in oxygen-poor environments, which makes it a targeted means of destroying oxygen-starved cells in tumors that are difficult to treat with chemotherapy and radiation. The ...
Treatment with lymph node cells controls dangerous sepsis in animal models
2014-08-13
An immune-regulating cell present in lymph nodes may be able to halt severe cases of sepsis, an out-of-control inflammatory response that can lead to organ failure and death. In the August 13 issue of Science Translational Medicine, a multi-institutional research team reports that treatment with fibroblastic reticular cells (FRCs) significantly improved survival in two mouse models of sepsis, even when delivered after the condition was well established. Even after treatment with antibiotics, sepsis remains a major cause of death.
"Our findings are important because, ...
Stimuli-responsive drug delivery system prevents transplant rejection
2014-08-13
Boston, MA – Following a tissue graft transplant—such as that of the face, hand, arm or leg—it is standard for doctors to immediately give transplant recipients immunosuppressant drugs to prevent their body's immune system from rejecting and attacking the new body part. However, there are toxicities associated with delivering these drugs systemically, as well as side effects since suppressing the immune system can make a patient vulnerable to infection.
A global collaboration including researchers from Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH); Institute for Stem Cell Biology ...
Statistical model predicts performance of hybrid rice
2014-08-13
RIVERSIDE, Calif. — Genomic prediction, a new field of quantitative genetics, is a statistical approach to predicting the value of an economically important trait in a plant, such as yield or disease resistance. The method works if the trait is heritable, as many traits tend to be, and can be performed early in the life cycle of the plant, helping reduce costs.
Now a research team led by plant geneticists at the University of California, Riverside and Huazhong Agricultural University, China, has used the method to predict the performance of hybrid rice (for example, the ...
Story ideas from NCAR: Seasonal hurricane forecasts, El Niño, wind energy, and more
2014-08-13
BOULDER – Researchers at NCAR and partner organizations are making significant headway in predicting the behavior of the atmosphere on a variety of fronts, including:
improving weather forecasts
advancing renewable energy capabilities
helping satellites avoid space debris
estimating the risk of a crop slowdown due to climate change
These advances are summarized in short online features now published each week on our AtmosNews website: http://www.ucar.edu/atmosnews.
To get a jump on stories about new research, we invite you to sign up for our concise weekly ...
Single gene controls jet lag
2014-08-13
LA JOLLA–Scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies have identified a gene that regulates sleep and wake rhythms.
The discovery of the role of this gene, called Lhx1, provides scientists with a potential therapeutic target to help night-shift workers or jet lagged travelers adjust to time differences more quickly. The results, published in eLife, can point to treatment strategies for sleep problems caused by a variety of disorders.
"It's possible that the severity of many dementias comes from sleep disturbances," says Satchidananda Panda, a Salk associate ...
NIH-led scientists boost potential of passive immunization against HIV
2014-08-13
WHAT:
Scientists are pursuing injections or intravenous infusions of broadly neutralizing HIV antibodies (bNAbs) as a strategy for preventing HIV infection. This technique, called passive immunization, has been shown to protect monkeys from a monkey form of HIV called simian human immunodeficiency virus, or SHIV. To make passive immunization a widely feasible HIV prevention option for people, scientists want to modify bNAbs such that a modest amount of them is needed only once every few months.
To that end, an NIH-led team of scientists has mutated the powerful anti-HIV ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Development of a novel modified selective medium cefixime–tellurite-phosphate-xylose-rhamnose MacConkey agar for isolation of Escherichia albertii and its evaluation with food samples
KIST develops full-color-emitting upconversion nanoparticle technology for color displays with ultra-high color reproducibility
Towards a fully automated approach for assessing English proficiency
Increase in alcohol deaths in England an ‘acute crisis’
Government urged to tackle inequality in ‘low-carbon tech’ like solar panels and electric cars
Moffitt-led international study finds new drug delivery system effective against rare eye cancer
Boston stroke neurologist elected new American Academy of Neurology president
Center for Open Science launches collaborative health research replication initiative
Crystal L. Mackall, MD, FAACR, recognized with the 2025 AACR-Cancer Research Institute Lloyd J. Old Award in Cancer Immunology
A novel strategy for detecting trace-level nanoplastics in aquatic environments: Multi-feature machine learning-enhanced SERS quantification leveraging the coffee ring effect
Blending the old and the new: Phase-change perovskite enable traditional VCSEL to achieve low-threshold, tunable single-mode lasers
Enhanced photoacoustic microscopy with physics-embedded degeneration learning
Light boosts exciton transport in organic molecular crystal
On-chip multi-channel near-far field terahertz vortices with parity breaking and active modulation
The generation of avoided-mode-crossing soliton microcombs
Unlocking the vibrant photonic realm: A new horizon for structural colors
Integrated photonic polarizers with 2D reduced graphene oxide
Shouldering the burden of how to treat shoulder pain
Stevens researchers put glycemic response modeling on a data diet
Genotype-to-phenotype map of human pelvis illuminates evolutionary tradeoffs between walking and childbirth
Pleistocene-age Denisovan male identified in Taiwan
KATRIN experiment sets most precise upper limit on neutrino mass: 0.45 eV
How the cerebellum controls tongue movements to grab food
It’s not you—it’s cancer
Drug pollution alters migration behavior in salmon
Scientists decode citrus greening resistance and develop AI-assisted treatment
Venom characteristics of a deadly snake can be predicted from local climate
Brain pathway links inflammation to loss of motivation, energy in advanced cancer
Researchers discover large dormant virus can be reactivated in model green alga
New phase of the immune response uncovered
[Press-News.org] Little penguins forage togetherForty percent of studied penguins synchronized underwater movements while foraging