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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

New Zealand: Pterodromas and Prions

Grey-faced Petrel (Pterodroma macroptera gouldi) and Cook's Petrel (Pterodroma cookii)
The largest and most confusing assemblage among the shearwaters and petrels of the world is the genus Pterodroma, the gadfly petrels.  Pterodroma petrels range throughout the warmer waters of the world, but before our pelagic trip on Hauraki Gulf I had had little chance to encounter them.  Those I had seen appeard only at a considerable distance - once, of all places, from the Lake Erie shoreline in Ontario, where I watched hurricane-blown Black-capped Petrels (Pterodroma hasitata) hunting over the barren waters in a vain search for food, a few days before their starved bodies washed up on the beach.

Cook's Petrel (Pterodroma cookii)Cook's Petrel (Pterodroma cookii)
Hauraki Gulf changed all that.  Here,  swarms of the most abundant gulf gadfly, Cook's Petrel (Pterodroma cookii), surrounded our boat, and we were visited by individuals of at least two - or, more likely, three - other species.

Cook's Petrel (Pterodroma cookii)
Cook's Petrel (Pterodroma cookii)
Cook's Petrel is - almost - another Hauraki Gulf breeding specialty.  I say "almost", because besides breeding on Great and Little Barrier Islands in the gulf, it also breeds far to the south on the Codfish Islands, west of Stewart Island. Though the population is well over a million birds, it is in decline.

Cook's Petrel (Pterodroma cookii)
Cook's Petrel (Pterodroma cookii)
Like other petrels breeding in the gulf, Cook's ranges widely across the Pacific in the off season, reaching the western coast of North America.  It was strange to realize, as we sailed the gulf waters, that so many seabirds that cover so much of the Pacific breed only here.  Hauraki Gulf is really Seabird Central - and I can only hope it stays that way.

Cook's Petrel (Pterodroma cookii)
Cook's Petrel gives it name to a complex of small gadfly petrels, the members of the subgenus Cookilaria.  Cookilarias are crisply patterned in black, grey and white, differing from each other in subtle details of shape, pattern and flight style, and can be a nightmare to identify.

Cook's Petrel (Pterodroma cookii)
Cook's Petrel (Pterodroma cookii)
Cook's Petrel itself (like many of its near relations) is highly variable - compare the extent and darkness of the grey on the head and the underside of the primaries on these two birds.  We studied (as best we could) any darker individuals that flew past us in the hope of finding a much rarer species, Pycroft's Petrel (Pterodroma pycrofti). 

Pycroft's has a slightly more extensive hood and shorter bill than Cook's, but spotting this at sea is no easy task.  In the end, our guides did call one bird that flew quickly past us (far too quickly for me to get a decent photo, though others managed) a Pycroft's.  I would have needed a lot more experience to make such a call myself, but I saw what they were talking about.


Black-winged Petrel (Pterodroma nigripennis)
A far easier call was our one other Cookilaria, a very handsome bird indeed: a Black-winged Petrel (Pterodroma nigripennis) that flew by us in the afternoon.  For once, this is not a Hauraki Gulf specialist; it breeds widely in the southwest Pacific, with the bulk of its New Zealand breeding population further north, in the Kermadec Islands.

Black-winged Petrel (Pterodroma nigripennis)
The broad black stripe on the underside of its wing distinguishes it easily from Cook's Petrel.

Grey-faced Petrel (Pterodroma macroptera gouldi)
Our fourth Pterodroma for the day was very different, a much larger and more heavily-built bird than the three Cookilarias: the Grey-faced Petrel (Pterodroma macroptera gouldi), the New Zealand subspecies of the Great-winged Petrel (Pterodroma macroptera), sometimes considered a species in its own right.

Grey-faced Petrel (Pterodroma macroptera gouldi)
Grey-faced Petrel (Pterodroma macroptera gouldi)
The Grey-faced Petrel may do a lot of its feeding by night.  The squid and fish that it seems to prefer normally do not come closer than 150 m to the surface by day, according to a 1973 study of the bird's feeding habits by M. J. Imber.

Grey-faced Petrel (Pterodroma macroptera gouldi)
Grey-faced Petrel (Pterodroma macroptera gouldi)
This bird, though, seemed quite happy to drop by our boat for a daytime snack.

Grey-faced Petrel (Pterodroma macroptera gouldi)
Its obvious grey face and broad-winged, blunt profile make the Grey-faced Petrel fairly easy to tell from the other dark petrels and shearwaters of the gulf.

Grey-faced Petrel (Pterodroma macroptera gouldi) and Fairy Prion (Pachyptila turtur)
Our final bird for this posting, here circling around the Grey-faced Petrel, is not a Pterodroma but a prion, a member of a petrel genus (Pachyptila) whose members are, perhaps, even harder to tell apart than the Cookilarias.

Fairy Prion (Pachyptila turtur)
Fairy Prion (Pachyptila turtur)
I say "perhaps because I have only ever seen one: this one, the Fairy Prion (Pachyptila turtur).

Fairy Prion (Pachyptila turtur)
Fairy Prion (Pachyptila turtur)
In contrast to the Hauraki Gulf specialists we encountered on our trip, the Fairy Prion is one of the most widespread and abundant seabirds in the Southern Hemisphere, with an estimated population of some five million birds.

Fairy Prion (Pachyptila turtur)
Fairy Prion (Pachyptila turtur)
The various prions are almost identical in plumage, differing largely in the size and shape of the bill.  They are small birds, and take smallish prey - mostly krill - which they pick daintily from the surface, often while in flight.

Fairy Prion (Pachyptila turtur)
In my next posting I will turn to two even smaller seabirds - including the species that, more than any other, sets Hauraki Gulf birders' hearts a-flutter.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

New Zealand: Shearwaters and a Petrel

Buller's Shearwater (Puffinus bulleri)
This is the first of three postings devoted to a closer look at the shearwaters, petrels and storm petrels that we saw on our Hauraki Gulf pelagic trip on 3 December 2011 (see previous posting).  It's the same sort of thing I did for the pelagic I took at Kaikoura in the South Island in March 2011 - the opportunities for photography on these things can be outstanding.  The birds themselves are, overall, a quite different lot than the ones at Kaikoura - I saw no albatrosses on Hauraki Gulf, for example, and no storm petrels at Kaikoura.  Two of the four species in this posting, however, did appear on both trips.  The first is Buller's Shearwater (Puffinus bullerii).

Buller's Shearwater (Puffinus bulleri)
Paradoxically, Buller's Shearwater - though it ranges, outside the breeding season, throughout much of the Pacific - can be regarded as a Hauraki Gulf specialty.  As I noted in my previous post, the gulf is practically the only place in the world where it breeds.

Buller's Shearwater (Puffinus bulleri)
Buller's Shearwater (Puffinus bulleri)
Buller's Shearwater (Puffinus bulleri)
Buller's is, to my eye, the most graceful and attractive of all shearwaters (or, at least, of the ones that I have seen).

Buller's Shearwater (Puffinus bulleri)
Most field guides pick on the striking reverse "W" pattern on the upper surface of the wings as Buller's most distinctive field mark.  You can see it clearly here.

Buller's Shearwater (Puffinus bulleri)
The under surface of the wings, by contrast, are almost entirely pure white.

Buller's Shearwater (Puffinus bulleri)
This one is checking below the surface, looking for the bits of food we have tossed out to lure it within reach.

Buller's Shearwater (Puffinus bulleri)
Like all shearwaters, even the daintiest, Buller's needs a good running start over the water to become airborne.

Flesh-footed Shearwater (Puffinus carneipes)
So does this altogether more solid bird, the Flesh-footed Shearwater (Puffinus carniepes) - another species I saw both here and at Kaikoura.

Flesh-footed Shearwater (Puffinus carneipes)
Flesh-footed Shearwater (Puffinus carneipes)
The Flesh-footed is one of a number of confusingly all-dark petrels with more or less pale, dark-tilled bills.  The giveaways, of course, are its pinkish-flesh legs.

Flesh-footed Shearwater (Puffinus carneipes)
The Flesh-footed's bill is quite pinkish, and comparatively long and slender, compared to the bills of the birds most likely to be confused with it in New Zealand - the petrels of the genus Procellaria.  We'll be coming to one of them in a moment.

Flesh-footed Shearwater (Puffinus carneipes)
This can be useful when the bird is in flight, and its legs are not easy to see.

Flesh-footed Shearwater (Puffinus carneipes)
Like Buller's, the Flesh-footed Shearwater travels vast distances in the non-breeding season, reaching the Pacific coasts of Canada and the United States (where it is, however, much rarer than Buller's).  Like so many other pelagic seabirds, it suffers from accidental drownings from longline fisheries, and my choke to death on floating plastic.  Its numbers are in decline.

Little Shearwater (Puffinus assimilis)
The Little Shearwater (Puffinus assimilis), smallest of the shearwaters, was a new species for me.  Unfortunately, Little Shearwaters are not particularly interested in boats, even birding boats tossing delicious-looking fish guts over the side (they prefer smaller prey items such as krill).  I had to be content with a few birds flying past at a distance - near enough, though, to see the species' most distinctive feature: the white of its face extends well above the eye.

Little Shearwater (Puffinus assimilis)
This is probably the local breeding subspecies haurakiensis.  Seabird taxonomy being what it is, there is a great deal of uncertainty about which of the various birds called "Little Shearwaters" around the world - particularly in the Atlantic - actually belong to this species.  Some may end up as species in their own right, and others should perhaps be associated instead with another species, Audubon's Shearwater (Puffinus lherminieri).  This subspecies, though, appears safely placed within the "true" Little Shearwaters, whatever they are.

Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
Our fourth bird is not a shearwater but a petrel: the Parkinson's or Black Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni), another new species for me (though I had seen the other two New Zealand Procellarias, the White-chinned and Westland Petrels (Procellaria aequinoctialis and westlandica) at Kaikoura and, on my first visit to New Zealand in 1974, found a carcass of a Parkinson's Petrel high on Little Barrier Island, one of its two known breeding grounds.

Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
Parkinson's Petrel, like Buller's Shearwater, breeds nowhere else in the world but in Hauraki Gulf, on Great and Little Barrier Islands.  There are only about 1400 breeding pairs, and Birdlife International ranks the species as Vulnerable.

Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
We only saw a few birds.  It looks very much like a Flesh-footed Shearwater, but has dark legs, appears more "bull-necked", and the pale areas of the bill are yellowish rather than pinkish.

Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
It's an impressive, long-winged, solid-looking creature.

Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
These two shots, by the way, are a good illustration of why plumage isn't of much use in identifying many seabirds.  Notice how the primaries and primary coverts appear darker than the rest of the wing in the upper photo, and lighter in the lower!  It's the same bird....

Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
Watching Parkinson's Petrel go after our chum made me realize not only how hungry the bird was, but how widely it was able to gape for the larger chunks of fish.

Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni)
On doing a little research, I discovered a study published in The Condor (1992) that showed that, on its wintering grounds off the coast of western South America, Parkinson's appears to be a highly-specialized feeder, associating strongly with two rare species of whale, the melon-headed whale (Peponocephalus electra) and the false killer whale (Pseudorca crassidens).  The authors, Robert Pitman and Lisa balance, suggested that Parkinson's, a "lumbering" bird but an accomplished diver, "feeds mainly by diving under the surface and retrieving sinking scraps of large prey dismembered by larger, generally slower-swimming species of dolphins feeding below the surface."  A large gape would be of use to such a bird.

Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni) and Flesh-footed Shearwater (Puffinus carneipes)
Parkinson's Petrel (Procellaria parkinsoni) and Flesh-footed Shearwater (Puffinus carneipes)
Once it does find a morsel, though, Parkinson's Petrel may have other problems.  This bird is being chased by a Flesh-footed Shearwater trying to bully the petrel out of its catch - not only a nice example of kleptoparasitism, or stealing someone else's food, but a good chance to compare these two very similar species side by side.