The Herald

Jellyfish naughty bits are tasty for penguins

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ADELIE penguins target jellyfish with visible sex glands for a tasty meal, according to new Antarctic research.

Footage shows the penguins occasional­ly feeding on these types of jellyfish, even when their preferred food of small shrimp-like crustacean­s known as krill are available, the study backed by conservati­on charity WWF found.

The findings, revealed in a new publicatio­n by scientists from the French and Japanese national Antarctic programmes, come from research conducted by fitting penguins with tiny cameras to see what they got up to under the sea ice.

The cameras weighed between 15g and 22g – less than an ounce – and were retrieved when the birds returned to the nest.

Footage filmed by the penguin cams was released last December when it became an internet sensation, WWF said.

It is thought the penguins, the smallest and most widelower spread in the Antarctic, target the jellyfish with prominent gonads because the carbon and protein content of the reproducti­ve organs is greater than any other part of the creature.

Jean-Baptiste Thiebot, from the National Institute of Polar Science, Japan, said: “We were surprised to see the penguins go for jellyfish and it raised the question: is this new behaviour for Adelie penguins, possibly developed because they had a hard time finding food during this year of very unusual sea-ice conditions, or is it simply newly revealed by using this video approach to study their diet?

“To clarify this, we will need to see comparison­s across different penguin species and different ocean regions.

“But these observatio­ns already reveal one more piece of the puzzle in the oceans’ food web.”

Informatio­n gathered from the research is being used by the wildlife charity to help create marine protected areas around Antarctica.

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