“…Sex-dependent lateralization may then be an efficient way to confuse predators as to vigilance behavior related to visually active fields, all while being able to save energy for instance via unihemispheric sleep, a faculty known to exist only in birds and aquatic mammals (Rattenborg, Lima, & Amlaner, 1999). This is all the more relevant for breeding penguins where energy sparing of stored body reserves while fasting on-land is critical to successful breeding (Gauthier-Clerc, Maho, Gendner, Durant, & Handrich, 2001;Groscolas & Robin, 2001;Olsson, 1997 We found that brooding king penguins initiated more agonistic interactions than incubating birds, which is consistent with previous findings (Côté, 2000) and with the idea that parents are willing to invest more into territorial defense with an increasing reproductive value of their chick (Côté, 2000;Viblanc, Dobson, et al, 2016;Viblanc, Smith, Gineste, Kauffmann, & Groscolas, 2015). Interestingly, brooding birds were also more strongly lateralized than incubating birds, which might be explained by a gradual increase in predation risk (e.g., by brown skuas) around the time of chick brooding (Descamps et al, 2005) .…”