Automated techniques for measuring meal size in great albatrosses

Image
Albatross chick close up
Periodic weighing of seabird chicks is labour-​intensive and repeated handling can cause high levels of disturbance to chicks. Although automatic weighing systems using a fibreglass nest have been designed for albatross species with a pedestal nest made of mud, this approach is inappropriate for great albatross species (genus Diomedea) whose nests consist of a low mound of soil and vegetation. We developed an automatic weighing technique, using a digital scale beneath a natural nest, to remotely measure meal size in great albatrosses. To illustrate the system’s capability when used coupled with time-lapse cameras, we present sample data by comparing meal sizes fed to chicks by male and female parents of northern royal albatross (Diomedea sanfordi). Our weighing system is not only applicable to other great albatross species, but can also be modified to allow automatic weighing of other terrestrial breeders.

Image: Wikimedia Commons

 
Authors
Sugishita, Junichi, et al
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Product Number
ORESU-R-17-003
Source (Journal Article)
New Zealand Journal of Ecology, 41(1):120-125, 2017
DOI Number (Journal Article)
https://doi.org/10.20417/nzjecol.41.6
Year of Publication
Length
6 pages
Miscellaneous
Additional authors: Murray McKenzie, Leigh G. Torres, Philip J. Seddon