Abstract

Ryan, P.G. 1999. Sexual dimorphism, moult and body condition of seabirds killed by longline vessels around the Prince Edward Islands, 1996–97. Ostrich 70 (3&4): 187–192. A total of 393 seabirds from nine species killed by longline fishing in South African waters around the Prince Edward Islands during summer 1996–97 were sexed, measured, and their body fat levels and primary moults scored. Males of Whitechinned Petrels Procellaria aequinoctialis and Greyheaded and (Indian Ocean) Yellownosed Mollymawks Thalassarche chrysostoma and T. [chlororhynchosj bassi averaged 1–9% larger than females. Measures of bill depth were the most dimorphic characters in all three species. I recommend that if only a single measure is taken to estimate sex of adults, bill depth at the base be the standard measure for petrels, and bill depth at the nail be the standard measure for mollymawks. Discriminant functions are described for predicting the sex of unknown individuals; the proportion of misclassified birds ranged from 2–10%. With the exception of giant petrels Macronectes spp., only two young birds were actively moulting their primary flight feathers. Analysis of wear patterns among adult Greyheaded Mollymawk primaries conforms with studies of moult in this species at South Georgia. Fat scores did not differ between sexes. They tended to decrease during the breeding season, but trends were masked by great inter-individual variation. There was no significant relationship between fat scores and the presence of ingested plastics. Plastic debris was found in the stomachs of 90 birds from five species. Incidence in Whitechinned Petrel stomachs (37%) was less than that reported from birds collected off South Africa in the early 1980s (57%), but this is probably due to the predominance of breeding adults. The frequency and size of plastic loads decreased through the breeding season, which is consistent with the hypothesis that inter-generational transfer is important in the dynamics of ingested debris.

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