Abstract
Kleptoparasitic behaviour of Arctic Skuas was studied at a Black Guillemot colony in northeastern Hudson Bay, Canada. Skuas procured fish in 7‐2% and 19‐9% of attacks, and Black Guillemots lost fish in 7‐2% and 21‐2% of chases in 1982 and 1983, respectively. In 1983 chase outcome was related to distance between birds at the end of a chase and number of skuas in pursuit. The skuas' foraging efficiency (energy intake/energy expended during hunting) was estimated at 45 for 1982 and 5–8 for 1983, and total daily energy expenditure was estimated at 2–4 and 2‐1 × b.m.r. for these years. Energetic calculations suggested that skuas obtained sufficient food to meet their daily needs in 3–6 h of hunting in 1982 and 2–7 h in 1983. The absence of intensive kleptoparasitic activity by breeding skuas in North America is attributed to the paucity of colonies suitable for both feeding (due to available host species and colony topography) and nesting (due to presence of arctic foxes and/or polar bears).
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