Attack of the killer penguins

Tiny cameras strapped to birds reveal them to be superb fish hunters

Research shows Adelie penguins are adept at stalking their prey. Getty
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TOKYO // Fish of the Antarctic, be very afraid. There is an unlikely stealth predator on the loose - Adelie penguins.

Forget their ungainly waddling on land. As soon as these penguins dive into the icy Antarctic ocean, they become calculating, efficient killing machines, say a team of Japanese researchers.

"You could say the penguins have an amazing stealth mode," said Yuuki Watanabe, a researcher at Japan's National Institute of Polar Research. "They're great at sneaking up on their prey and taking them unaware."

Dr Watanabe this week released footage from December 2010 showing a bird's-eye view of a hunt for fish and small crustaceans called krill, captured using tiny cameras strapped to the backs of more than a dozen penguins.

"The krill wiggle their bodies about, they clearly make an attempt to swim off at full speed to escape," Dr Watanabe said of his findings, in the US-based Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"But that doesn't make the slightest difference to the penguins. They just gobble up the krill that are trying to get away and swallow them whole."

Using the "penguin cams" which were set to automatically switch on when a penguin entered the water and run for 90 minutes, Dr Watanabe and his team were able to capture the secrets of penguins on the hunt.

Additional information came from two accelerometers strapped to each bird that measured its head and body movements to calculate how fast it devoured its prey.

"We did not really know if the penguins caught krill one-by-one. I had thought that maybe they just got into their stomachs when they were after some other prey," Dr Watanabe said. "But when we saw the footage it turned out the penguins were doing just that, eating these tiny little creatures one after the other."

Not only that, the penguins did not swim randomly but hung poised on the edge of the ice until a thick swarm neared, then dived in to the water. Footage showed a penguin zooming under the ice and then deeper, its head snapping rapidly up as it fed.

The krill killing-rate was both fast and efficient. The penguins gobbled an average of two krill per second when the krill were clustered in swarms, a much faster rate than under general hunting conditions when the penguins.

"I was so happy when I got the footage of a penguin going straight into a swarm of krill and gorging itself," Dr Watanabe said.

Penguin research completed, Dr Watanabe now aims to repeat the exercise with sharks.

* Reuters