Abstract

Although most Little Penguins (Eudyptula minor) breed on offshore islands, several small colonies occur on the mainlands of New Zealand and Australia, including mainland Tasmania. Unlike island colonies, most mainland colonies have declined over recent decades, several having gone extinct. A mainland colony of Little Penguins in North Harbour, Sydney, Australia, was monitored over three consecutive breeding seasons (2002–03 to 2004–05). The number of known nesting pairs was 49–56 per annum. The mean number of eggs laid per pair (2.45), eggs hatched per pair (1.84), fledglings produced per pair (1.71), hatching success (0.72) and breeding success (0.70) were among the highest reported from Australian colonies. Underlying these figures was a particularly high proportion of pairs that double-brooded (14–31% per annum, mean 24%). Fledging mass as a percentage of mean adult mass (103%) was also high. Together, these results suggest that food at the North Harbour colony was abundant during the period of study. Fledglings first returned to the colony at 1–4 years of age and first bred at 2–4 years of age. The recruitment rate of fledglings produced at the North Harbour colony was up to 15%, much higher than that recorded elsewhere. Banding recoveries (1997–2005) show that the North Harbour colony contains a substantial number of immigrants that have come from as far afield as Phillip Island, 761 km south of Sydney. Individuals banded at North Harbour have been recovered as far away as Sydenham Inlet, Victoria, 485 km to the south. The mixed provenance of the North Harbour population demonstrates that it is not isolated, either demographically or genetically, from other colonies in south-eastern Australia.

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