Guarding their nests is serious business for these medium-sized penguins, with predatory seabirds called brown skuas on the prowl.
But this species, scientists said on Thursday, has devised an ingenious way of getting sufficient sleep without compromising vigilance.
The researchers documented extreme sleep behavior in these flightless birds.
"Penguins do not display any obvious negative consequence of sleep fragmentation," Libourel said.
During incubation, skuas prey on penguin eggs, particularly on a colony's periphery.
Persons:
chinstraps, ecophysiologist Paul, Antoine Libourel, Won Young Lee, George Island, Libourel, Lee, Will Dunham, Rosalba O'Brien
Organizations:
Lyon Neuroscience Research, Korea Polar Research, GPS, Penguins, Thomson
Locations:
Lyon, France, Korea, Incheon, Washington