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Erect-crested penguins on the Bounty Islands: population size and trends determined from ground counts and drone surveys

  • Publication Type

    Journal

  • Publication Year

    2021

  • Author(s)

    T. Mattern; K. Rexer-Huber; G. Parker; J. Amey; C.P. Green; A.J.D. Tennyson; P.M. Sagar; D.R. Thompson

  • Journal Name

    Notornis

  • Volume, Issue

    68, 1

  • Pagination

    37-50

  • Article Type

    Paper

Keywords

Bounty Islands; drone survey; Erect-crested penguin; nest counts; nest densities; New Zealand fur seal; population trends; subantarctic islands


Erect-crested penguins on the Bounty Islands: population size and trends determined from ground counts and drone surveys

Notornis, 68 (1), 37-50

T. Mattern; K. Rexer-Huber; G. Parker; J. Amey; C.P. Green; A.J.D. Tennyson; P.M. Sagar; D.R. Thompson (2021)

Article Type: Paper

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In October 2019, an expedition to the subantarctic Bounty Islands provided the opportunity to conduct comprehensive ground counts of erect-crested penguins to assess population size and compare numbers to previous surveys. The entirety of Proclamation Island, an erect-crested penguins’ stronghold, was surveyed and number of active penguin nests was determined via ground counts. Drone surveys aiming at assessing seal numbers, provided high- resolution aerial photography allowing spatial analysis of penguin nest densities on four islands, i.e. Proclamation, Tunnel, Spider, and Ranfurly Islands. A total of 2,867 penguin nests were counted on Proclamation Island between 24 and 29 October. Adjusting for the earlier timing of the survey compared to counts conducted since 1997, nest numbers were only marginally lower (~2.4%) than in 1997 and 2004 suggesting that the penguin population has remained stable for the past 20 years; a ~10% reduction in penguin numbers in 2011 seems to be related to warmer than average ocean temperatures that year. Density analysis from drone imagery showed highly heterogenous distribution of penguin nests, with birds preferring areas sheltered from prevailing south-westerly winds. This also means that a previous estimate from 1978 which relied on uniform extrapolation of nest densities to what was assumed to suitable breeding areas substantially overestimated the true population size, thereby contributing to the species current ‘endangered’ threat ranking.