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Foraging ecology and choice of feeding habitat in the New Zealand Fairy Tern Sternula nereis davisae

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2013

STEFANIE M. H. ISMAR*
Affiliation:
GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research, Experimental Ecology, Düsternbrooker Weg 20, 24105 Kiel, Germany. School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand. Royal Forest & Bird Protection Society New Zealand, PO Box 108 055, Auckland, New Zealand.
TOM TRNSKI
Affiliation:
Auckland Museum, Private Bag 92018, Victoria St. West, Auckland, New Zealand.
TONY BEAUCHAMP
Affiliation:
Department of Conservation, TSO Ecology and Environment, Northland Conservancy, PO Box 842, Whangarei, New Zealand.
SARAH J. BURY
Affiliation:
National Institute for Water and Atmospheric Research, 301 Evans Bay Parade, Kilbirnie, Wellington, New Zealand.
DAVID WILSON
Affiliation:
Department of Conservation, Auckland Conservancy, Warkworth, New Zealand.
ROBYN KANNEMEYER
Affiliation:
School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand.
MARK BELLINGHAM
Affiliation:
Royal Forest & Bird Protection Society New Zealand, PO Box 108 055, Auckland, New Zealand.
KAREN BAIRD
Affiliation:
Royal Forest & Bird Protection Society New Zealand, PO Box 108 055, Auckland, New Zealand.
*
*Author for correspondence; email: sismar@geomar.de
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Summary

No published information is available on the foraging ecology and choice of feeding habitat of New Zealand’s rarest breeding bird: the New Zealand Fairy Tern (NZFT) Sternula nereis davisae. To address this gap, we conducted an assessment of the largest remaining breeding population at Mangawhai Harbour, Northland, New Zealand, during the chick-rearing period of the 2010/2011 breeding season. We combined visual tracking of birds with prey surveys and stable isotope analyses, and we present the first quantitative assessment of NZFT foraging. We recorded 405 foraging dives that show NZFT foraging habitat includes the water edges, shallow channels, and pools on the tidal flats of mangrove-lined (Avicennia marina var. resinifera) parts of the estuary; tidal pools on mud- and sandflats in the mid-estuary and lower harbour; the shallow margins of the dredged main channel in the lower harbour; the oxbow lagoons on the sand spit; and coastal shallows. Our study identifies the mangrove-lined highly tidal and shallow mid-estuary and the lagoon on the sand spit as foraging hotspots for the Mangawhai breeding population of the NZFT. The prey survey employed a seine-net sampling method at identified NZFT foraging sites and yielded 4,367 prey-sized fish of 11 species, two of which had not previously been reported in Mangawhai Harbour, as well as numerous shrimps. The most abundant fish were gobies of the genus Favonigobius. Our stable isotope results highlight gobies as the most important prey for NZFT chick rearing, also indicating that flounder Rhombosolea sp. contribute to NZFT diet. We raise the possibility that shrimps may also constitute a substantial diet component for NZFT, potentially providing up to 21% of diet mass for adult birds. While our results provide a first basis to understanding the feeding ecology of NZFT during their breeding season in order to facilitate conservation planning, further research is required to address inter-annual variation and to identify key foraging grounds for this Critically Endangered bird at other breeding sites.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © BirdLife International 2013 
Figure 0

Figure 1. Breeding range of the New Zealand Fairy Tern Sternula nereis davisae; yellow symbols: the four remaining breeding locations at Waipu, Mangawhai, Pakiri and Papakanui Spit; inset: NZFT feeding a goby Favonigobius sp. to its chick, Mangawhai 2008/2009 breeding season (Photo credit: Ian Southey; satellite images: Data SIO, NOAA, U.S. Navy, NGA, GEBKO, 2010 DigitalGlobe, TerraMetrics, GoogleTMEarth).

Figure 1

Figure 2. (a) New Zealand Fairy Tern foraging habitats monitored in the Mangawhai Harbour (shaded); grey symbols: observer positions; asterisks: NZFT nest sites; black circles: prey sampling sites A-J; (b) symbols: foraging dives of NZFT recorded in the 2010/2011 nesting season; (c) kernel density distribution of foraging NZFT at Mangawhai 2010/2011 (Land Information New Zealand (LINZ) topographic maps).

Figure 2

Table 1. Summary of attendance, including foraging, roosting and transit behaviour of the New Zealand Fairy Tern (NZFT) population at NZFT habitats at Mangawhai in the 2010/2011 nesting season.

Figure 3

Table 2. Survey summary of potential NZFT prey at identified foraging sites in Mangawhai Harbour and Harbour, the lagoon on the sand spit, and its adjacent shallows; medians, 25% and 75% quartiles shown for all fish species. All fish abundances standardised /10 m haul length.

Figure 4

Figure 3. Size-distributions of Favonigobius sp., Arenigobius bifrenatus, and Gobiopterus semivestitus at sampling sites A-J, Mangawhai, plotted in order from upstream to downstream. No gobies were caught in the ocean (Site H).

Figure 5

Figure 4. Carbon and nitrogen stable isotope signatures (means and standard deviations) of New Zealand Fairy Tern feathers of adults and chicks, and potential prey taxa identified from seine net sampling (black symbols). Prey signatures, plus the fractionation factor of 3.4‰ for N and 0.8‰ for C, are indicated by blue symbols, where the dotted lines show the fractionation increment from the measured prey tissue isotope values.

Supplementary material: File

ISMAR et al. supplementary material

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