New Zealand's endangered yellow-eyed penguin have been found to follow the line of swooping seabirds - literally - when it comes to reaping the food stirred up by trawlers.
An Otago University research team have discovered the penguins, of which there were around 500 estimated pairs left on mainland New Zealand, forage in straight lines for several kilometres by following furrows in the seafloor scoured out by fishing trawlers.
Using GPS dive loggers the researchers monitored the penguins' movements over three years showing the birds use furrows scoured on the seabed by otter boards from trawl nets to find food, particularly blue cod.
"This research is unique as it shows for the first time that not only do flying seabirds follow fishing vessels, but also penguins, with the latter foraging after a trawler has gone through a particular area," lead research Professor Philip Seddon said.
The researchers said blue cod and other bottom feeders were likely to forage around the seafloor lines because they were attracted to the marine life stirred up and exposed by the action of the nets being dragged behind fishing trawlers.