Abstract

We report an observational study of aggressive behaviour by adults during the post-guard phase in the chinstrap penguin. The study was carried out in one subcolony where all the individuals (breeders, chicks and failed breeders) were banded, as well as in nine other subcolonies where individuals were not identifiable. Breeding adults were more aggressive towards unrelated chicks when they were feeding their own chicks than in other contexts. Chicks were also attacked at high rates by adults that did not belong to their own subcolonies. The evidence suggests that some aggressions to chicks by adults may function to avoid interference from unrelated chicks during food transfers, but our data also show that aggressive interactions are common in contexts other than chick feeding. However, aggression by adults did not show any clear spatial directionality or purpose of shepherding the chicks, and these tended not to move in any particular direction when attacked.

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