Attachment
Download
In Blue-eyed and King shags (
Phalacrocorax atriceps and
P. albiventer), moult of the rectrices is irregular but not random. R1 (Rectrix 1) was usually the first to be replaced in sub-adult Blue-eyed shags but not in adults. In Blue-eyed shags, moulting rectrices were most often separated by one or two non-moulting rectrices. When two adjacent rectrices were moulting in adult Blue-eyed shags, one was usually over half grown before the other began moulting, or both were about the same length or missing. Up to six rectrices moult simultaneously in sub-adults and up to eight in adults. Moult of rectrices is usually not symmetrical in Blue-eyed shags. In adults, the number of moulting feathers and the number of waves are correlated among flight feathers. In flight feathers of sub-adults, the number of moulting feathers is not correlated but the number of moulting waves and the number of retained juvenile flight feathers are correlated. Most moult of flight and body feathers takes place after breeding, but a limited amount occurs during breeding and in winter.