Learnz 2001

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Background

Great Barrier homepage 

 

An Island Environment

Biodiversity

Geology and landforms

Outer Hauraki Gulf

Offshore islands

Wetlands

 

People and the Environment

Cats

Conservation

Meet DoC's Rebecca Stanley

European settlements

Goats

Kauri - a natural resource

Maori history

Minerals and mining

Shipwrecks

Weeds and plant pests

Whaling

 

Threatened Species

Black petrel pics

Black petrel facts

Brown teal pics

Brown teal facts

Chevron skink pics

Chevron skink facts

Kauri

Kereru

What is a lizard?

Geckos

Skinks

North Island kaka

Endangered plants

Updated: September 12, 2001

 

Black Petrel

Black petrels return to Great Barrier Island in October to breed - Image: Heurisko Ltd
Black petrels return to Great Barrier Island
in October to breed

 

Visitors to Mt Hirakimata use walkways designed to protect black petrel burrows - Image: Heurisko Ltd
Visitors to Mt Hirakimata use walkways
designed to protect black petrel burrows

Black petrels (Procellaria parkinsoni) are tubed nosed seabirds that nest in soft-earth burrows on the slopes of forested hills. Once their range extended throughout New Zealand but they are now only found on Great and Little Barrier islands in the outer Hauraki Gulf.

These seabirds migrate east over the Pacific Ocean to feed during the winter and early spring months. They are often sighted foraging at sea towards South and Central America. They dive to catch their food as well as sitting on the sea and catching fish near the surface. The are able to dive to a depth of around 10 metres and use their wings to swim underwater. They are nocturnal feeders.

In the late spring months they return to their breeding grounds from age 4 or 5 on and mate. A single large egg is laid at the end of a burrow between 1 and 3 metres long. The egg is incubated for nearly 2 months with the parents taking turns of up to 2 weeks at a time. The chick fledges at 3 - 4 months of age.

These birds are not very good walkers and so make difficult journeys through the forest on foot to take off points. It is from these exposed points that petrels can launch themselves into the air.

Petrels rarely call during flight. Their calls are heard as they leave their nests after dark and on return in the early morning. Chicks honk or snort from about 3 weeks on, while they are in their burrows.

More about black petrels

 

Parts of a Black Petrel
Features
Major Functions
External
Feathers
Water proof

Sooty black

Heavy body

Camouflage

Warmth

Buoyancy

Wings
115cm wing span

Can hold stiffly with occasional wing beats

Flying, gliding

Soaring, wheeling

Diving to 10m underwater

Swimming under water

Beak or Bill
Bluish - yellow with dark tip

Short/compact

Well hooked

Tube nostrils

Catching squid, fish, crustaceans

Preening

Legs and Feet
Black

Webbed

Clumsy on ground

Eggs
1 white egg

in burrow above 300m

Reproduction

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