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Non‐breeding behaviour of Magenta Petrels Pterodroma magentae at Chatham Island, New Zealand
Author(s) -
IMBER M. J.,
TAYLOR G. A.,
TENNYSON A. J. D.,
AIKMAN H. A.,
SCOFIELD R. P.,
BALLANTYNE J.,
CROCKETT D. E.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
ibis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.933
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1474-919X
pISSN - 0019-1019
DOI - 10.1111/j.1474-919x.2005.00463.x
Subject(s) - burrow , courtship , seasonal breeder , digging , zoology , courtship display , biology , ecology , geography , archaeology
Magenta Petrels Pterodroma magentae were caught at light‐attraction stations on southwest Chatham Island, New Zealand, and most were fitted with transmitters. Of 52 captured since 1993, 71% were males, and all 36 tracked adequately proved to be non‐breeders in the breeding season of capture. Our data indicated no sex bias in their probability of being captured at lights. Males provided 86% of trackings, and 87% of trackings of birds flying over the breeding area were males. Males landed 118 times; females 13 times. Only males were found on the ground, by night and day, apparently unassociated with burrows (three with and ten without transmitters), but subsequently digging burrows ( n  = 8). Of 19 birds banded as fledglings up to 2000, males were first recaptured nearing 4 years old (at lights and on the ground) and a female nearing 6 years old (in burrow). Among 37 fledglings, the sex ratio was even. Nine tracked males occupied burrows, as did two females, but the latter were older recaptures (10+ and 25+ years old). It appears that only males claimed existing, or dug new, burrows. They then attracted a mate to the burrow by means unknown, but from among females frequenting an inshore courtship area near the colony, or occasionally flying over the colony, at night. Females established in burrows, but then losing their mate, were able to re‐mate there, by calling from near the burrow or by attracting a mate in flight or from the postulated inshore courtship area. Both sexes sometimes took years to pair or re‐mate, possibly reflecting the dearth of available mates.

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