Birdwatch

New storm petrel species described from South Pacific

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USING biometrics and genetic data, scientists have identified a new species of storm petrel endemic to the French overseas territory of New Caledonia, in the South Pacific.

The newly documented taxon, named New Caledonian Storm Petrel Fregatta lineata, is known from three previously misidentif­ied museum specimens and recent sight records at sea off New Caledonia and in the Coral Sea.

The team analysed the three specimens (one collected on the Marquesas Islands in 1922; another from Samoa in 1839; and a third from Queensland, Australia, 1973) and found them to be identical to each other, as well as identical to those birds observed at sea off New Caledonia. The situation is unusual in that this species is technicall­y not new to science, having been given a pre-existing name some 175 years ago, but its true identity has only just been confirmed.

The first modern sighting was made off southern New Caledonia in 2008, with numerous observatio­ns from the same area in subsequent years. A peak day count of 24 individual­s was made in January 2020. Further sightings came in the Coral Sea in 2010. In terms of appearance, it resembles another species – New Zealand Storm Petrel – the rediscover­y of which involved British seabird expert, Bob Flood, who was also involved with the initial sightings of New Caledonian Storm Petrel in 2008.

The study also documents the first breeding evidence for the species, involving a fledgling that was caught and released at Port Bouraké, New Caledonia, in September 2014, which indicates winter breeding and correspond­s to the majority of observatio­ns of the species, which have been between January and April.

However, its breeding grounds remain unknown. Islets across New Caledonia’s Great South Lagoon have been carefully searched without success, and the researcher­s say that it is “vitally important” to find the breeding colony, and put protection measures in place. Those museum specimens collected from the Marquesas and Samoa almost certainly suggest this as the non-breeding range, while sightings from the Coral Sea are assumed to represent a breeding-season feeding area.

Based on the numbers observed at sea, the population is probably in the order of 1001,000 pairs and could already be Critically Endangered. The researcher­s urge that further work to find its breeding grounds is conducted immediatel­y.

 ?? ?? New Caledonian Storm Petrel has been named as a new species.
New Caledonian Storm Petrel has been named as a new species.

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