Habitat Occupation of Birds in a New Zealand High Country Drainage during the Breeding Season

1962 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 129-139 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graeme Caughley
Keyword(s):  
1979 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 273 ◽  
Author(s):  
JR Ottaway

Synonymy and geographical distribution of A. tenebrosa are discussed. Reproductive cycle and fecundity were examined between 1972 and 1975 inclusive at Kaikoura, New Zealand. At any one time, up to 77% of the adult population developed gonads and 20-94% of adults were brooding young. The main periods of gonad development, November-April inclusive, coincided with the warmest annual sea temperatures. Over 99.4% of brooded embryos dissected from 1851 adults were tentaculate young; the rest were planulae. It is suggested that the normal reproductive mode of the observed population is cross-fertilizing labile gonochorism, in which adults change from one sex to the other within each breeding season. Brooding adults would therefore be the maternal parents of their brooded embryos, even though subsequently the brooders would appear to be asexual or could become functional males.


2013 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
STEFANIE M. H. ISMAR ◽  
TOM TRNSKI ◽  
TONY BEAUCHAMP ◽  
SARAH J. BURY ◽  
DAVID WILSON ◽  
...  

SummaryNo published information is available on the foraging ecology and choice of feeding habitat of New Zealand’s rarest breeding bird: the New Zealand Fairy Tern (NZFT) Sternula nereis davisae. To address this gap, we conducted an assessment of the largest remaining breeding population at Mangawhai Harbour, Northland, New Zealand, during the chick-rearing period of the 2010/2011 breeding season. We combined visual tracking of birds with prey surveys and stable isotope analyses, and we present the first quantitative assessment of NZFT foraging. We recorded 405 foraging dives that show NZFT foraging habitat includes the water edges, shallow channels, and pools on the tidal flats of mangrove-lined (Avicennia marina var. resinifera) parts of the estuary; tidal pools on mud- and sandflats in the mid-estuary and lower harbour; the shallow margins of the dredged main channel in the lower harbour; the oxbow lagoons on the sand spit; and coastal shallows. Our study identifies the mangrove-lined highly tidal and shallow mid-estuary and the lagoon on the sand spit as foraging hotspots for the Mangawhai breeding population of the NZFT. The prey survey employed a seine-net sampling method at identified NZFT foraging sites and yielded 4,367 prey-sized fish of 11 species, two of which had not previously been reported in Mangawhai Harbour, as well as numerous shrimps. The most abundant fish were gobies of the genus Favonigobius. Our stable isotope results highlight gobies as the most important prey for NZFT chick rearing, also indicating that flounder Rhombosolea sp. contribute to NZFT diet. We raise the possibility that shrimps may also constitute a substantial diet component for NZFT, potentially providing up to 21% of diet mass for adult birds. While our results provide a first basis to understanding the feeding ecology of NZFT during their breeding season in order to facilitate conservation planning, further research is required to address inter-annual variation and to identify key foraging grounds for this Critically Endangered bird at other breeding sites.


2008 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 256-264 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Seaton ◽  
Noel Hyde ◽  
John D. Holland ◽  
Edward O. Minot ◽  
Brian P. Springett

2002 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 97 ◽  
Author(s):  
SD Mcconkey ◽  
H Mcconnell ◽  
C Lalas ◽  
S Heinrich ◽  
A Ludmerer ◽  
...  

The primary objective of the population management plan for New Zealand sea lions, Phocarctos hookeri, is to move the species from its current conservation status of ‘Threatened’ to ‘Non-threatened’. The mechanism by which this will occur is through the establishment of new breeding colonies away from the only existing colonies at Auckland Islands and Campbell Island. Otago, on the southeast coast of the South Island of New Zealand, is one of only three locations where breeding has been recorded away from these islands in modern times. We found only one female at the initiation of our surveys here in 1991, an individual that had been tagged as a pup at Auckland Islands. This female has remained resident at Otago and is now breeding. Her first live birth, in the 1993/94 breeding season, represented the first record of a P. hookeri pup on the New Zealand mainland since the elimination of the species here by humans c. 150 years ago. Up to and including the 2000/01 breeding season she had produced six pups. Her surviving pups have remained at Otago and her eldest two daughters have started breeding, producing a further three pups. From this total of nine live births, two pups have died. Although 6 - 8 other migrant females have been recorded, to our knowledge none have bred at Otago. We conclude that the initiation of breeding by P. hookeri at Otago has been a serendipitous event attributable to atypical behaviour by a single female.


2002 ◽  
Vol 29 (6) ◽  
pp. 627 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ben Reddiex ◽  
Graham J. Hickling ◽  
Grant L. Norbury ◽  
Chris M. Frampton

The impact of predation and rabbit haemorrhagic disease (RHD) on population dynamics of rabbits, and the survival of juvenile rabbits, was investigated between July 1999 and March 2000 in North Canterbury, New Zealand. Rabbit abundance and pre- and post-emergent rabbit mortality were monitored on four sites, two of which were subject to predator control. RHD spread naturally through all sites from late November to early December. Rabbit densities declined on all sites, but after the RHD epidemic, declines were significantly greater where populations of predators had not been controlled. Survival of rabbit nestlings was lower where predators were not controlled. All post-emergent radio-collared rabbits died at sites where predators were not controlled, whereas 18% of those collared at sites where predators were controlled survived to maturity. In contrast to the results from previous studies, rabbits born at the start of the breeding season had very high rates of post-emergent mortality, as they appeared to be susceptible to the RHD virus later in the breeding season. The age at which juvenile rabbits become susceptible to RHD, the timing of RHD epidemics, and the abundance of predators are likely to be important in determining survival of juvenile rabbits. This study demonstrates that predation can reduce rabbit populations to low levels, but only in combination with other factors, in this case RHD.


2002 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 485-488 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yutaka FUKUI ◽  
Kenji IIDA ◽  
Aki OKADA ◽  
Yukio ZYOUZYOU ◽  
Sachiko WACHI ◽  
...  

1971 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 79 ◽  
Author(s):  
MC Pilkington

Both the New Zealand species of Melarapha, M. cincta and M. oliveri, laid minute planktonic egg capsules, of the "Drum" type, in the laboratory. Capsules were similar in the two species, but could be distinguished in side view by shape. Eggs developed rapidly, hatching at an early veliger stage in 3-4 days at room temperature. Attempts to rear these very small larvae were not successful, but later veligers, taken from plankton hauls, were reared through metamorphosis and identified as Melarapha. Veliger stages are drawn and described and the length of planktonic life assessed as 1-2 months. The two species are indistinguishable after hatching until many months after metamorphosis when the adult coloration of the shell is developed. Spawning was studied at Portobello in a mixed population of M. cincta and M. Oliveri extending from high HWS to low HWS. The breeding season was from November to March. Spawning, in animals associated with rock pools, occurred intermittently and not particularly during spring tides. The presence of egg capsules of both species in rock pool samples was associated ( χ² tests) with a rock pool salinity of 33-36‰ and with the occurrence of rough weather.


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