Vocalizations Very little information is available on the vocalizations of the Chilean skua. At the breeding colony, it performs a long-call which consists of ten to twelve short nasal barks. They have been seen scavenging
penguin meat, fish, and dumpster food, and they are known to steal fish from other seabirds. They are also known to feed on
white-chinned petrels,
Magellanic diving petrels,
cormorants,
geese,
nutria, seals,
crustaceans, and
barnacles.
Reproduction From November to February or March, Chilean skuas aggregate into breeding colonies in sandy coastal habitat. Breeding adults tend to concentrate in the center of the colony, and non-breeding adults and
subadults distribute themselves on the fringes. Nesting parents attack intruders from above; this display can involve the discharge of excrements onto the perceived threat. If the intruder is another member of the same species, it will fake a leg injury to show its submission towards the attacking bird. Aggression towards neighbours is only observed in non-dense breeding colonies. There are usually two eggs in a clutch, and these are
incubated for 28 to 32 days. In the absence of their parents, chicks will remain motionless at their nest site and camouflage themselves in the sand among patches of
giant kelp. In the presence of their parents, they will venture a bit further from the nest but will walk back with their wings folded against their body and their head under their shoulders at the first sign of a threat. ==Notes==