There are three Zoological Field Assistant roles on BI: the
giant petrel and penguin, the seal and the albatross. The three positions last
around 18 months. This allows us to learn the job from the current ZFA’s when
we first arrive in November until they leave in April; then we complete the
winter ourselves before handing over to the next group the following November
to April.
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Al going through the GPS settings with me before a study (Photo courtesy of Lucy) |
This works really well as it means each position has 2 ZFA’s
working in it during each summer when work loads are higher. However, as Lucy,
the albatross ZFA, has extended to stay for an extra year there was no second
albatross ZFA for the current summer. This means that whenever I can, around
the giant petrel and penguin work, I become an albatross assistant as well and
get to work with the mollymawks.
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Lucy monitoring in a grey-head colony |
Mollymawks, the common term for any albatross species in the
genus
Thalassarche – which on BI
consists of the grey-heads and black-brows – nest in colonies all across the
island. These colonies are designated by the alphabet and it is in colonies B,
E, H, J and N where most of our molly work is completed.
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Molly colonies (black-brow colony N on the left, grey-head colony B on the right) are on steep tussock slopes |
The colonies are often one species or the other although
they can have some mixing going on. However, these two species do not
interbreed as it takes grey-heads longer to raise a chick (69-78 days
incubation, 140 days chick rearing) than the black-brows (65-72 days
incubation, 110-125 days chick rearing) and as such they nest biennially as
opposed to annually.
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Grey-head colony with a few black-brows on the edge mixing in |
Much like with the
giant petrels and
skuas our work consists
of monitoring these areas for population and productivity; going through each colony systematically
counting the nests that are still active.
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Lucy checking a black-brow colony |
Now we have passed the hatching period and the chicks are
being raised by the adults. It is amazing to see these little albatrosses
growing bigger and hopefully they have a successful season!
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The chicks are starting to get big enough to be left on their own (grey-head the two left, black-brow two right) |
By doing the surveying of these colonies alongside Lucy as
much as I can I am able to learn the layout of each of the five colonies. This
will be very important as the chicks will be nearly fully grown and then
beginning to fledge in April and May; the time when Lucy will be away to have a
short break between her extended stay on BI, so it will be my responsibility to
ensure the monitoring is continued in Lucy’s absence.
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Black-brow wondering why I am looking happy when collecting its poo! (Photo courtesy of Lucy) |
It is not just the mollies that are surveyed either. The
sooties are also checked for population and productivity but on a less frequent
basis as they are a more nervous species. Due to the location of their nests,
the sooties are often on cliff ledges, monitoring is done from a distance by
binoculars.
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Unfortunately the sooty nests are just too far away for decent pictures, so here is an adult I got closer to |
It is a privilege to be able to be so involved with these
species; alongside my regular work with the petrels and penguins I couldn’t
have wished for a more varied and thorough experience of seabird monitoring in
the Antarctic!
It beats chasing moorhens around Center Parcs Tim!! Just read the whole of your blog, very inspiring. Mike
ReplyDeleteGlad you have been enjoying the blog Mike. It is amazing down here and hopefully the training will help when catching those moorhens when I get back!
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