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  • Springer  (3)
  • Taylor & Francis  (2)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-02-08
    Description: Marine top predators forage in environments that show potentially extreme temporal and spatial variation in prey availability, with reproductive success being crucially linked to food supply. Multiple factors of interannual and sexual variation, as well as variation across breeding stages, can shape patterns of spatial use in foraging seabirds, yet studies that address all of these variables simultaneously are rare. We present spatial assessment of foraging patterns by µGPS tracking of a sexually size monomorphic, long-lived species, the Australasian gannet (Morus serrator). The study spanned the incubation and chick-rearing stages in three consecutive breeding seasons. Our findings revealed high interannual variability in foraging distances and trip durations, but no consistent differences between birds across different breeding stages or the sexes. The exception was that core foraging areas were different for female and male Australasian gannets, although trip durations or distances were similar for both sexes. Our results also indicate bimodality in foraging distance and trip duration in this species, while highlighting interannual variability in the extent of bimodality. These findings contribute to a scarcely documented type of foraging behaviour in the seabird family of the Sulidae. Overall, these spatial use patterns provide a baseline for understanding the evolution of sex-specific foraging differences in biparental seabirds, and the extent to which these differences might help in securing breeding success across years of variable food availability.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2020-07-20
    Description: New technologies enable tracking of the route, duration, and destination of previously unassessed long-distance movements. Fledgling Australasian Gannets Morus serrator from breeding populations in New Zealand had been reported to fly across the Tasman Sea to Australia, with this historic knowledge derived from the recovery of banded carcasses and from observations of initial flight direction. We deployed Argos satellite devices on ten M. serrator fledglings at Cape Kidnappers Gannetry, North Island, New Zealand, across 2 years. Birds that were tracked leaving the colony initially appeared to have landed on the sea. A male bird and two female birds were tracked moving along the east coast to the south tip of New Zealand. The two females then crossed the Tasman Sea to eastern Australian coastal waters in 4 and 5 days, respectively. We suggest that, contrary to historic reports, the route via Stewart Island constitutes a realized migration path for fledglings from Cape Kidnappers, which might minimize the distance traveled across the open sea to southeastern Australia or Tasmania. Our results further imply that initial direction of flight needs not be indicative of the subsequent migration route taken by M. serrator. This highlights the importance of direct tracking technology for adequate assessment of dispersal and migration in seabirds and other highly mobile species.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2020-06-22
    Description: Screening for pathogenic micro-organisms is an essential component of translocation-based conservation management. While there are some data on pathogens in New Zealand passerines, little is known about the distribution and prevalence of pathogens infecting New Zealand Psittaciformes. We conducted a survey for pathogens of the vulnerable New Zealand endemic red-crowned parakeet Cyanoramphus novaezelandiae in two wild populations (Little Barrier Island and Raoul Island), and in a translocated population (Tiritiri Matangi Island). A total of 101 cloacal samples were tested for Salmonella and Yersinia. Of these, 82 samples were also tested for Campylobacter. None of these microorganisms were detected. Although our sampling effort was insufficient to detect a low prevalence of Campylobacter, modelling of minimum detectable prevalence of Salmonella and Yersinia indicates that these micro-organisms would have been detected if present as common or chronic conditions of red-crowned parakeets at these sites.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2020-06-22
    Description: Studies of the selective advantages of divorce in socially monogamous bird species have unravelled extensive variation among different lineages with diverse ecologies. We quantified the reproductive correlates of mate retention, mate loss and divorce in a highly philopatric, colonially breeding biparental seabird, the Australasian gannet Morus serrator. Estimates of annual divorce rates varied between 40-43% for M. serrator and were high in comparison with both the closely related Morus bassanus and the range of divorce rates reported across monogamous avian breeding systems. Mate retention across seasons was related to consistently higher reproductive success compared with mate replacement, while divorce per se contributed significantly to lower reproductive output only in one of two breeding seasons. Prior reproductive success was not predictive of mate replacement overall or divorce in particular. These patterns are in accordance with the musical chairs hypothesis of adaptive divorce theory, which operates in systems characterised by asynchronous territorial establishment.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2020-08-03
    Description: Natural re-colonisation events are rare so it can be important to monitor newly establishing populations to understand and characterise such events. As re-colonising populations are often freed from spatial and competitive constraints, documenting the sex-ratio of offspring may provide insights in sex-allocation theory. We studied a re-establishing population of Black-winged Petrels (Pterodroma nigripennis) on Raoul Island, in the Kermadec Group, New Zealand, where all predators have recently been removed. Wemeasured, and took DNA samples from 20 chicks in four new colonies in 2007, when the colonies first re-established, 25 chicks from seven colonies in 2008, and 25 adults captured across both years, including seven that were caught nearby at sea, and two adults caught at a colony where no chicks were sampled. We found the developmental stage of chicks to have no differences between sexes, and recorded no sexual differences in the morphometrics of chicks or adults. We report a significantly biased sex-ratio towards male offspring in the first year of re-colonisation. In contrast, the sex-ratios of offspring in the second year of re-colonisation and of adults in both years were even. We suggest that biases in offspring sex-ratios towards the more philopatric sex may be adaptive when under release from spatial or competitive constraints in re-colonising birds. Continued monitoring of the populations of Black-winged Petrels re-establishing on Raoul Island, as well as comparable data from adjacent islets with long-established breeding colonies of Black-winged Petrels will be critical to identify the realised ecological role of variation in offspring sex-ratio and of sex-biased natal philopatry.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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