Agonistic behaviour of the Giant-Petrels Macronectes giganteus and M. halli feeding at eal carcasses
Emu
79(3) 129 - 132
Published: 1979
Abstract
At the islands where they breed, the two giant-petrels derive only a small part of their diet from seals that die ashore. Both species behaved similarly when feeding on seal carcasses at Macquarie Island. However, M. halli, the less abundant species, adapted to the Subantarctic, was more frequently recorded at this source of food than the more numerous M. giganteus, adapted to the Antarctic; yet in disputes at the carcasses, M. giganteus was more aggressive and more successful. This may be explained by the far greater availability of dead seals in the Subantarctic than the Antarctic. Consequently, M. halli has a greater tendency than M. giganteus to eat this food but selection for aggressiveness while doing so may have been greater in M. giganteus.
https://doi.org/10.1071/MU9790129
© Royal Australian Ornithologists Union 1979