Abstract

Abstract I studied molt and plumage in the ‘Elepaio (Chasiempis sandwichensis), a monarch flycatcher endemic to the Hawaiian Islands, at Hakalau Forest National Wildlife Refuge on the island of Hawai‘i from 1994–1997. I captured birds in mist nets, examined them for molt, measured their plumage color with Munsell color chips, and followed them for several years to document plumage changes. Male and female Hawai‘i ‘Elepaio exhibited three distinct post-juvenal plumages, first basic, second basic, and definitive basic, and thus have a two-year delay in plumage maturation. ‘Elepaio have a single annual molt, so there are no alternate plumages. The first prebasic molt is partial, but all subsequent molts are complete. The first basic plumage is juvenile-like and sexually monochromatic. The second basic and definitive basic plumages are sexually dimorphic in throat color. In each sex the second basic plumage resembles definitive plumage. Age-related plumage changes include increases in the whiteness, number, a...

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