Abstract

Summary Duffy, D. C. 1987. Ecological implications of intercolony size-Variation in Jackass Penguins. Ostrich 58: 54–57. The culmen length of courting adult male Jackass Penguins Spheniscus demersus varied between colonies, with the largest culmens in southern Namibia and east of Cape Point, South Africa. Taxonomic distance, a single measure combining several morphological characters, was significantly and positively correlated with geographic distance between colonies. Population changes between 1956 and 1978 were not significantly correlated with male mandible or flipper length, suggesting that adult size cannot be used as an index of population changes at individual colonies. Possible dispersal may complicate attempts to use changes at individual colonies as indices of changes in fish stocks of surrounding waters.

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