• Title of article

    FINDING ONES MATE IN A KING PENGUIN COLONY: EFFICIENCY OF ACOUSTIC COMMUNICATION

  • Author/Authors

    LENGAGNE، THIERRY نويسنده , , JOUVENTIN، PIERRE نويسنده , , AUBIN، THIEKRY نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
  • Pages
    -832
  • From page
    833
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    In the king penguin, during the three months of incubation and the brooding stage, mermbers of a pair alternate care duties on land with foraging trips. Contrary to most of the species of birds that nest at a fixed location, the king penguin carries its egg on its feel during incubation. This allows the incubating parents to move in the colony. Brooding or incubating parents moved on average 4.4 meters between egg-laying and the end of the brooding stage. This movement in a group of thousands of other birds reduced the reliability of visual cues for recovering the pair mate during the change-over. We showed that the difficulty in relocating the mate was more important during the brooding stage than during incubating. We confirmed earlier findings that acoustic communication was the main mode of communication during a change-over, and showed that the omnidirectional properties of sound allowed birds to reach more than five hundred other birds with each emitted call. Our experiments proved that the communication system is performed at short or medium range. On average, the birds identified their male at a distance of 8.8 m. Seventy percent of the birds started the acoustic search of their mate when lhe distance was shorter or equal to this discrimination range, and so acoustic communication is a particularly efficient strategy in the king penguin.
  • Keywords
    synchronisation , ungulates , bighorn sheep , sociality , groups.
  • Journal title
    BEHAVIOUR (LEIDEN)
  • Serial Year
    1999
  • Journal title
    BEHAVIOUR (LEIDEN)
  • Record number

    21329