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Brown Teal research is a bit like unpicking an old jersey.
We pull a thread and follow it for as long as possible, though
not always sure where it will take us.
Some ideas prove fruitful, others prove to be a dead-end.
But even confirming that an idea is not useful is still progress
- of a sort.
Some of the research completed projects in recent years include:
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Cockle-opening by a Dabbling Duck, the Brown Teal
Abstract.- Many birds feed on bivalves, but only oystercatchers
(Haematopus
spp.) are known to prise open the shells. Brown
Teal (Anas chlorotis), a dabbling duck endemic
to New Zealand, were observed opening Common Cockles
(Austrovenus stutchburyi) on Great Barrier Island.
The teal jackhammered into the open shells of feeding
cockles and quickly scooped out the flesh. Despite having
the bill morphology of a typical dabbling duck, they
were adept at this feeding method.
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The use of
wing remains to determine condition before death
in brown teal ( Anas chlorotis)
Abstract - Little is known of the causes of mortality
in captive-bred brown teal (Anas chlorotis) released to
the wild. To test whether feeding difficulties have contributed
to the poor survival of released birds, we developed a
method to
detect starvation using the wing fat content of brown
teal. We extracted the lipids from 4 outer wing components
of 17 intact brown teal carcasses. The lipid content of
each component reflected the birds nutritional condition
(based on body mass and size, and visible fat). Lipids
were also extracted from the outer wing components of
7 partial brown teal carcasses, 6 of which were from captive-bred
released birds whose cause of death could not be determined.
All of the released teal were found to have been in very
poor nutritional condition immediately before death, implicating
starvation as a factor in their deaths. Improving the
feeding regime of captive-bred brown teal (pre- and post-release)
is likely to increase their survival. |
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The fossil distribution of Brown Teal (Anas chlorotis)
in NZ
Abstract - The distribution and relative frequency
among anatids of Brown Teal (Anas chlorotis)
in Holocene fossil deposits on the North, South, and
Stewart Islands
of New Zealand
are reviewed. Brown teal remains representing 641 birds
are reported from 73 widely distributed sites throughout
New Zealand. The fossil sites indicate the prehistoric
use of a large range of palaeohabitats including coastal
sites, lakes, swamps, and forests as diverse as wet
podocarp and beech forests up to 700 m altitude. There
is often no direct association of these forest sites
with aquatic habitats such as rivers or ponds indicating
that Brown Teal were foraging often at considerable
distances from such features while in forests. In the
seasonally drier eastern regions Brown Teal were confined
more to aquatic habitats, though this may have been
the result of competitive exclusion with Finschs duck
which dominated terrestrial habitats, rather than habitat
incompatibility.
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Hybridisation in Fiordland Brown Teal (Anas chlorotis)
Abstract - The brown teal is an endangered duck species
native to New Zealand. Once widespread, it is now restricted
to Northland, Great Barrier Island and a remnant population
in Fiordland. Molecular genetic studies have shown that
Fiordland brown teal mitochondrial DNA sequences are
more similar to those of mallards and grey ducks than
to those of brown teal from the North Island. This suggests
that hybridisation has taken place between the brown
teal and either mallards, grey ducks or mallard-grey
duck hybrids. However, allozyme and morphological studies
have not provided evidence for hybridisation, and the
DNA sequences obtained by the initial molecular genetic
study could not be confirmed as the target sequence.
This study uses the mitochondrial control region to
determine the extent of hybridisation in Fiordland brown
teal. All Fiordland brown teal sequences examined were
found to be more similar to mallards and grey duck sequences
than to sequences of brown teal from Great Barrier Island.
This confirmed that hybridisation between brown teal
and mallards, grey ducks or mallard-grey duck hybrids
was present and extensive in the Fiordland brown teal
population. The sequence data provided insufficient
information to differentiate the grey duck sequences
from the single mallard sequence. Accordingly it was
not possible to determine whether the Fiordland brown
teal were hybrids of mallards or grey ducks. Consequently
it is not yet possible to determine whether hybridisation
in Fiordland brown teal is a natural long-term process
or an anthropogenic, short term process induced by habitat
destruction and rarity. This influences conservation
management decisions that will determine the future
of the Fiordland brown teal. Future research will use
sequences from museum specimens to examine the origin
and history of hybridisation in Fiordland brown teal.
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PHYLOGENY, BIOGEOGRAPHY, AND TAXONOMY OF AUSTRALASIAN
TEAL
Abstract - The taxonomy of the Australasain teals has
been particularly unstable. Australasian Grey Teal (Anas
gracilis) and Chestnut Teal (A. castanea)
are widely viewed as specifically distinct, but the
taxonomy of the New Zealand teals remains unsettled.
Because conservation status is affected by taxonomic
rank, it is important to resolve the status of the rare
subantarctic teals. To estimate phylogenetic relationships
of teals, we sequenced three mitochondrial DNA genes
(12S, and ATPase 6 and 8 ). The resultant phylogeny
unequivocally groups the Chestnut Teal with the Grey
Teal, rather than with the New Zealand teals as has
traditionally been held (Feming 1953). A greater level
of sequence divergence occurred within the New Zealand
teals than between the Grey and Chestnut teals. This
diversity, together with morphological and behavioral
differences, implies that the New Zealand teals should
be accorded specific status as A. aucklandica, A.
nesiotis, and A. chlorotis. Although it is
most likely that the teal that colonized the Auckland
Island and Campbell Islands originated in New Zealand,
our data do not allow us to determine whether the ancestors
of the Campbell Island Teal came from mainland New Zealand
or the Auckland Islands. This uncertainty arises because,
as our data show, the colonization events were separated
by a short period of time.
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