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Red-billed gull
The red-billed gull (Chroicocephalus novaehollandiae scopulinus), also known as tarāpunga and as the mackerel gull, is a native seagull of New Zealand, found throughout the country and on outlying islands including the Chatham Islands and subantarctic islands. It was formerly considered a separate species but is now usually treated as a subspecies of the silver gull (Chroicocephalus novaehollandiae).
The Māori name of this species is tarāpunga or akiaki. Its vernacular name is sometimes also used for the dolphin gull, a somewhat similar-looking but unrelated species that is found in coastal southern Chile, Argentina and the Falkland Islands. As is the case with many gulls, the red-billed gull was traditionally placed in the genus Larus.
A national survey of breeding red-billed gulls carried out in 2014–2016 recorded 27,831 pairs nesting in New Zealand. The authors of a study published in 2018 and based on the survey said that the accuracy of previous estimates was questionable, but that the species nevertheless appeared to have declined nationally since the mid-1960s. The study also discussed the possible reasons for the decline and made a proposal for future monitoring. Under the New Zealand Threat Classification System, the status of the red-billed gull changed from 'not threatened' in 2002 to 'nationally vulnerable' in 2016. The red-billed gull is a protected species under the Wildlife Act 1953. Penalties for disturbing or harming the birds include a fine of $100,000 and/or two years' imprisonment.
The red-billed gull is the smallest gull commonly seen in New Zealand. It is about 37cm long, with an all-red bill, red eye ring, red legs and feet, and pale grey wings with black wingtips. The rest of the body and the tail are white. Males are on average slightly heavier than females, but there is virtually no visual difference between the male and female birds. Juvenile gulls have a dark brown bill with only hints of red, making them difficult to distinguish from the black-billed gull. The legs of juveniles are also brown and there are brown spots on the grey wings.
The red-billed gull was formerly considered a distinct species, but is now considered to be a subspecies of the similar-looking silver gull found in Australia.
Red-billed gulls breed in about 80 colonies on New Zealand's North and South Islands (mostly on the east coast of both islands), on offshore islands and in the Chatham Islands. Many birds fly several hundred kilometres between their breeding colony, which they return to each year, and sites where they spend the winter. Most birds stay within 400km of their breeding colony. There are also several inland breeding colonies at Sulphur Point at Lake Rotorua, which increased in size between the 1990s and 2010. Māori history recalls that in 1823, Te Arawa people living on Mokoia Island in Lake Rotorua were attacked by the Ngāpuhi tribe. The Te Arawa people were warned of the attack when a flock of red- and black-billed gulls disturbed by the attackers flew up, squawking an alert. After the battle, Te Arawa honoured the gulls by declaring them tapu or sacred.
The national population of red-billed gulls increased between the 1930s and 1970. A 1965 analysis estimated that at that time there was a national breeding population of 40,000 pairs of birds, but numbers have declined since then. In 2014–2016, Birds New Zealand and the Department of Conservation carried out a national survey of red-billed gull breeding colonies and found an estimated 27,831 breeding pairs. The three largest colonies used to be at Three Kings Islands (35 km north of the North Island), the Mokohinau Islands (100 km northeast of Auckland in the Hauraki Gulf) and Kaikōura on the east coast of the South Island. A 1934 report of an expedition to the Three Kings group stated that there were "tens of thousands" of red-billed gulls on the water which flew into the air as the expedition's ship approached: "There were literally acres of these birds on the sea feeding on small fish, and, as they rose off the water, the air was filled with white birds like a great snowstorm." At Mokohinau, an expedition in November 1933 observed thousands of nesting red-billed gulls.
The colonies at Three Kings Islands and Mokohinau have declined by more than 80 per cent since the 1990s, for reasons yet unknown: by 2016, there were only 1763 breeding pairs at the Three Kings Islands, and 58 at Mokohinau. The 2014–2016 study found that the largest mainland colonies were at Kaikōura (3210), Taiaroa Head (2145), Rotorua (2277) and Marsden Point (1190). The only large colonies on off-shore islands were at the Three Kings Islands (1763 pairs) and Stephens Island (1250 pairs).
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Red-billed gull
The red-billed gull (Chroicocephalus novaehollandiae scopulinus), also known as tarāpunga and as the mackerel gull, is a native seagull of New Zealand, found throughout the country and on outlying islands including the Chatham Islands and subantarctic islands. It was formerly considered a separate species but is now usually treated as a subspecies of the silver gull (Chroicocephalus novaehollandiae).
The Māori name of this species is tarāpunga or akiaki. Its vernacular name is sometimes also used for the dolphin gull, a somewhat similar-looking but unrelated species that is found in coastal southern Chile, Argentina and the Falkland Islands. As is the case with many gulls, the red-billed gull was traditionally placed in the genus Larus.
A national survey of breeding red-billed gulls carried out in 2014–2016 recorded 27,831 pairs nesting in New Zealand. The authors of a study published in 2018 and based on the survey said that the accuracy of previous estimates was questionable, but that the species nevertheless appeared to have declined nationally since the mid-1960s. The study also discussed the possible reasons for the decline and made a proposal for future monitoring. Under the New Zealand Threat Classification System, the status of the red-billed gull changed from 'not threatened' in 2002 to 'nationally vulnerable' in 2016. The red-billed gull is a protected species under the Wildlife Act 1953. Penalties for disturbing or harming the birds include a fine of $100,000 and/or two years' imprisonment.
The red-billed gull is the smallest gull commonly seen in New Zealand. It is about 37cm long, with an all-red bill, red eye ring, red legs and feet, and pale grey wings with black wingtips. The rest of the body and the tail are white. Males are on average slightly heavier than females, but there is virtually no visual difference between the male and female birds. Juvenile gulls have a dark brown bill with only hints of red, making them difficult to distinguish from the black-billed gull. The legs of juveniles are also brown and there are brown spots on the grey wings.
The red-billed gull was formerly considered a distinct species, but is now considered to be a subspecies of the similar-looking silver gull found in Australia.
Red-billed gulls breed in about 80 colonies on New Zealand's North and South Islands (mostly on the east coast of both islands), on offshore islands and in the Chatham Islands. Many birds fly several hundred kilometres between their breeding colony, which they return to each year, and sites where they spend the winter. Most birds stay within 400km of their breeding colony. There are also several inland breeding colonies at Sulphur Point at Lake Rotorua, which increased in size between the 1990s and 2010. Māori history recalls that in 1823, Te Arawa people living on Mokoia Island in Lake Rotorua were attacked by the Ngāpuhi tribe. The Te Arawa people were warned of the attack when a flock of red- and black-billed gulls disturbed by the attackers flew up, squawking an alert. After the battle, Te Arawa honoured the gulls by declaring them tapu or sacred.
The national population of red-billed gulls increased between the 1930s and 1970. A 1965 analysis estimated that at that time there was a national breeding population of 40,000 pairs of birds, but numbers have declined since then. In 2014–2016, Birds New Zealand and the Department of Conservation carried out a national survey of red-billed gull breeding colonies and found an estimated 27,831 breeding pairs. The three largest colonies used to be at Three Kings Islands (35 km north of the North Island), the Mokohinau Islands (100 km northeast of Auckland in the Hauraki Gulf) and Kaikōura on the east coast of the South Island. A 1934 report of an expedition to the Three Kings group stated that there were "tens of thousands" of red-billed gulls on the water which flew into the air as the expedition's ship approached: "There were literally acres of these birds on the sea feeding on small fish, and, as they rose off the water, the air was filled with white birds like a great snowstorm." At Mokohinau, an expedition in November 1933 observed thousands of nesting red-billed gulls.
The colonies at Three Kings Islands and Mokohinau have declined by more than 80 per cent since the 1990s, for reasons yet unknown: by 2016, there were only 1763 breeding pairs at the Three Kings Islands, and 58 at Mokohinau. The 2014–2016 study found that the largest mainland colonies were at Kaikōura (3210), Taiaroa Head (2145), Rotorua (2277) and Marsden Point (1190). The only large colonies on off-shore islands were at the Three Kings Islands (1763 pairs) and Stephens Island (1250 pairs).