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Aspects of breeding by Hutton’s shearwaters (Puffinus huttoni) at a recently established colony at Te Rae o Atiu, Kaikōura Peninsula, New Zealand

  • Publication Type

    Journal Article

  • Publication Year

    2024

  • Author(s)

    Rowe LK, Howard T

  • Journal Name

    Notornis

  • Volume, Issue

    71, 4

  • Pagination

    147-163

  • Article Type

    Paper

Keywords

Hutton’s shearwater, Puffinus huttoni, Te Rae o Atiu, Kaikōura Peninsula, New Zealand, breeding, Kaikōura tītī.


Aspects of breeding by Hutton’s shearwaters (Puffinus huttoni) at a recently established colony at Te Rae o Atiu, Kaikōura Peninsula, New Zealand

Notornis, 71 (4), 147-163

Rowe LK, Howard T (2024)

Article Type: Paper

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A colony of the Nationally Vulnerable Hutton’s shearwater (Puffinus huttoni) was established by translocations to Te Rae o Atiu, Kaikōura Peninsula from 2005. Weekly observer visits to the wooden nestboxes, and records from passive integrated transponder readers, provided detailed records of breeding activity. Birds visited many nestboxes in a season, with up to 29 birds recorded at one nestbox, and one bird recorded at 23 nestboxes. Breeding started at 4 years for males and 5 years for females. The pre-laying exodus by females averaged 11.8 days; however, there were instances of birds making up to three brief visits back to the colony. Egg laying was usually on the night of arrival back from the pre-laying exodus, and was asynchronous — average 6 November, but as late as 25 December. There were seven instances of two eggs being found in a nestbox in one season, with evidence of relaying in at least one case. The average hatching date was 13 December, incubation averaged 52 days, with a mean hatching success of 58%. Fledgling period was 87 days on average, with a mean success of 88%, resulting in mean productivity of 52%. Chicks left nestboxes on average 8 nights before fledging, before their first migration to Australian waters. Adults stopped visiting the nestboxes on average 17 days before their chicks fledged for females and 8 days for males. Fledging mass averaged 415 g, 75% of the mean peak mass of 550 g. Single parents successfully fledged a chick when the mate was lost or ceased visiting for up to 71 days before fledging, and a light mass chick (310 g) returned to Te Rae o Atiu and paired up. Divorce occurred in 36% of pairings that did not end with the loss of a partner; 87% of birds had at least one divorce, and one bird lost one mate and divorced six times in 13 years. Nestbox fidelity showed changes by many pairs, especially if there has been a change of partner.