Abstract
Nineteen colonies of the king shag, Phalacrocorax albiventer purpurascens, occur on Macquarie I.
varying in size from 3 to 320 breeding pairs. The total population was estimated at 660 breeding pairs in
1975-79. Breeding varied annually, but most eggs were laid in the last half of October with an average
clutch size over two seasons of 2.7 eggs. Most chicks hatched by late December and fledged from late
January onwards. Minimum age at first breeding was 2 years but most shags did not breed until the age
of 4 years or more. Faithful breeding pairs tended to be more successful than those that changed mates
although most remained together for only one or two seasons. Male shags had a stronger tendency to
retain their nest-site than did females, and it was the female that was responsible for the breakdown of
the pair-bond. This breakdown and annual variation in breeding success was thought to be mainly due
to shortage of food, which consisted solely of benthic fish.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
19 articles.
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