Return-Path: palmer@atsvax.rsmas.miami.edu Return-Path: Received: from atsvax.rsmas.miami.edu by icess.ucsb.edu (8.7/SMI-8.7-Icess) id HAA12260; Sun, 7 Jan 1996 07:05:08 -0800 (PST) Date: Sun, 7 Jan 96 14:51:22 GMT From: palmer@atsvax.rsmas.miami.edu Message-Id: <960107145122.2cc0679d@atsvax.rsmas.miami.edu> Subject: DAVIS STATION SCIENCE SITREP - DEC 95 To: palmer_science@atsvax.rsmas.miami.edu X-ST-Vmsmail-To: MSG%"PALMER_SCIENCE" SEND PLM461.JAN MSG%"PALMER_SCIENCE" DAVIS STATION SCIENCE SITREP - DEC 95 R 071302Z JAN 96 FROM: Marian Moyher, Supervisor Laboratory Operations Responding: Please insert in message, all CAPS, with the ! in column 1: !TO PAL SCIENCE, MANAGER, LABMGR, ADMIN, SCITECH P A L M E R S T A T I O N A N T A R C T I C A PHONE/FAX: 011-874-150-3157 INTERNET::PALMER@ATSVAX.RSMAS.MIAMI.EDU cc list: SPOLE,DUKE,PPENHALE@NSF.GOV,DALLUGE@ESE.OGI.EDU, VLF@STAR.STANFORD.EDU,KARENTZD@ALM.ADMIN.USFCA.EDU, DPP-MESSAGES@NSF.GOV,NATPALMER,TADDAY@ASUVM.INRE.ASU.EDU, DALLUGE@ATMOS.OGI.EDU,NSFCHCH@ASA.IAC.ORG.NZ, SSTEPHEN@NSF.GOV,SHEPHEDO.ASA@ASA.ORG,NSFMCM.MCMURDO@MCMURDO.GOV, EVANSJO.ASA@ASA.ORG,KAREN@ICESS.UCSB.EDU,ICEMAN@NEU.EDU, ASACHCH@ASA.IAC.ORG.NZ,WWWEATHERS@UCDAVIS.EDU, ROBIN@ICESS.UCSB.EDU,LANGDON@ICESS.UCSB.EDU,MCK2@GERGA.TAMU.EDU, RAY@ICESS.UCSB.EDU,DUNTON@UTMSI.ZO.UTEXAS.EDU, FNTED@AURORA.ALASKA.EDU,CSULLIVA@NSF.GOV,GRANDCSA.ASA@ASA.ORG, GAUTIER@ESRG.UCSB.EDU,OHOLMHANSEN@UCSD.EDU,MVERNET@UCSD.EDU, 71552.1334@COMPUSERVE.COM,HOFMANN@CCPO.ODU.EDU, WEILER@WHITMAN.EDU,RBHANSON@NSF.GOV,ROCKY@BIOSPHERICAL.COM, JCALLAHA@NSF.GOV,DPEACOCK@NSF.GOV,SUPPORT@CALIFIA.SEASPACE.COM, BSIDELL@MAINE.MAINE.EDU,PROSPERO@RCF.RSMAS.MIAMI.EDU, SAVOIE@RCF.RSMAS.MIAMI.EDU,FRAZER@LIFESCI.UCSB.EDU, WHBOB@ARCANE.UCSD.EDU,DICHTLRU.ASA@ASA.ORG,CVLECK@IASTATE.EDU, DKARL@SOEST.HAWAII.EDU,PHILLIJA.ASA@ASA.ORG,KLUCKHRO.ASA@ASA.ORG, ASAMCM.MCMURDO@MCMURDO.GOV,UBIWT@TREX.OSCS.MONTANA.EDU, FERRISDO.ASA@ASA.ORG,DELONG@MARBTECH.LSCF.UCSB.EDU, DAVISON@MAINE.MAINE.EDU,KOTTMEST.ASA@ASA.ORG DAVIS STATION SCIENCE SITREP DEC 1995 Report of activities at Davis Station during the month S-038 FORAGING ECOLOGY AND REPRODUCTIVE ENERGETICS OF ANTARCTIC PETRELS. Wesley W. Weathers, University of California, Davis CA 95616 PERSONNEL ON STATION: Peter Hodum, Karen Gerhart, Jane Wilson, Catherine Bone Karen completed the respirometry work on adult snow petrels and cape petrels at the beginning of December. She then moved the respirometry system to Hop Island in preparation for the second phase of the metabolism research. Once chicks begin hatching in early January, Karen will be determining resting metabolic rates on all four species. She will be measuring chick metabolic rates throughout the nestling period. Peter and Jane have been based on Hop since the end of October. They have been following the fates of marked nest sites for each of the four species. Egg laying dates were determined for approximately one hundred nests of each species and adult birds at these nests were marked with picric acid. This marking enables us to follow the cycling of adults incubating eggs and determine the length of each incubation stint. Antarctic petrels began laying on 19 November, peaked on 24 November, and finished on 29 November. Snow petrels began laying on 27 November, peaked on 1 December, and finished on 8 December. Cape petrels began laying on 27 November, peaked on 5 December, and finished on 12 December. And southern fulmars began laying on 6 December, peaked on 12 December, and finished on 16 December. An interesting development this season is that all four species have had a reduced breeding effort compared to the previous two breeding seasons. Of pairs of snow and Antarctic petrels that had eggs the previous two seasons only 60% laid an egg this season. And only approximately 80% of the cape petrels and fulmars are breeding this season. Incubation patterns thus far do not differ from those of the previous two seasons and there is no indication of unusually high desertion rates. In mid-December Karen shifted to Hop and Catherine arrived on the mid-season voyage. The entire team is now based on Hop. Until the chicks hatch, Karen will be running adult Antarctic petrels and fulmars in the respirometry system in order to obtain resting metabolic rates. Peter has begun the incubation stage doubly labelled water component on cape and snow petrels. This will provide information on the energy expenditure of incubating adults. At present we are waiting for chicks to hatch to move into the focal part of the field season. The Adelies seem to be having a successful season thus far with the majority of nests still having two chicks. By this time last year most nests were down to one chick. Based on the well fed appearance of most chicks, Adelies are having no trouble finding food thus far. The decreased breeding effort by the 07123353.138 PLM461.JAN