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Using egg floatation to estimate the age and hatching dates of South Island pied oystercatcher (Haematopus finschi) eggs

  • Publication Type

    Journal Article

  • Publication Year

    2024

  • Author(s)

    McArthur NJ, Krouse SK, Thomas D, Thompson H, Melville DS, Williams EM, Walker S, Schlesselmann A-KV

  • Journal Name

    Notornis

  • Volume, Issue

    71, 2

  • Pagination

    37-45

  • Article Type

    Paper

Keywords

Charadriiformes, egg age, egg floatation, Haematopodidae, hatching success, nest survival, South Island pied oystercatcher


Using egg floatation to estimate the age and hatching dates of South Island pied oystercatcher (Haematopus finschi) eggs

Notornis, 71 (2), 37-45

McArthur NJ, Krouse SK, Thomas D, Thompson H, Melville DS, Williams EM, Walker S, Schlesselmann A-KV (2024)

Article Type: Paper

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Egg floatation is a technique which can be used to estimate egg age and hatching dates of New Zealand shorebird eggs. It can be used to improve the accuracy of nest survival models, help identify nest outcomes, assist with chick survival monitoring and to prioritise the capture of incubating birds. We used egg floatation to estimate the age and hatching dates of South Island pied oystercatcher (Haematopus finschi) (SIPO) eggs. We developed regression equations to estimate the age of SIPO eggs by modelling egg angle and egg float height against egg age using a sample of eggs with known hatch dates. For early incubation eggs, we used linear regression to model the relationship between egg age and egg angle only, whereas for late incubation eggs we used multiple regression to model the relationship between egg age and both egg angle and egg float height data. These equations allowed 90% of SIPO eggs to be aged to within five days of their actual age. We recommend that species-specific regression equations describing the relationship between egg float characteristics and egg age be developed for other New Zealand shorebird species, to aid future research, monitoring and conservation management actions on these species.