Food and feeding Like all cormorants, the rock shag feeds by diving for underwater prey. It feeds close to shore, often diving at the edge of
kelp beds and apparently finding small fish (predominantly
cod icefishes,
Patagonotothen species) sheltering among the weed. Studies with
depth gauges suggest that it is a fairly shallow diver, typically going about 5 m below the surface with few individuals diving deeper than 10 m, although its prey mainly comes from the sea floor. Dive times are typically around 30 seconds. Its breeding range overlaps markedly with that of the
imperial shag Leucocarbo atriceps, but the two species' foraging ranges are different since the imperial shag tends to dive in deeper water, further out from shore.
Breeding The rock shag usually nests on ledges on steep, bare, rocky cliffs. It normally lays three eggs, though nests of from two to five eggs have been seen. Nesting colonies range is size from five pairs to nearly 400. ==References==