Introduction
The Rapa Shearwater Puffinus myrtae (Bourne Reference Bourne1959) has a tiny breeding population restricted to a few islets off Rapa Island (27°35’S, 144°20’W), and maybe Marotiri (85 km south-east of Rapa; Gaskin Reference Gaskin2007), within the Austral Islands (Eastern Polynesia, South Pacific). There are very few at-sea observations, all off Rapa Island and Marotiri rocks, for example, in October–November 2019 and 2021 (Flood et al. Reference Flood, Zufelt, Bretagnolle and Shirihai2021). In October 2021, H. Tanoi and S. Tanoi (personal communication) observed few individuals and only adults off Rapa, despite this being the typical fledging period for the species. An isolated report off Tahanea Island, Tuamotu, in March 2003 (VanderWerf et al. Reference VanderWerf, Pierce, Gill, Wragg, Raust and Tibbitts2006) does not include a formal description of the observed bird to assess the identification (Flood and Zufelt Reference Flood and Zufelt2021). Breeding at Rapa Island is seasonal, adults attend burrows from April to chick fledging in mid-November (Holyoak and Thibault Reference Holyoak and Thibault1984). If the population size was estimated at 250–360 pairs from surveys conducted in 1974 (Thibault and Varney Reference J.-C and Varney1991), recent estimates are dramatic, and the population today is severely reduced, with only 18 breeding pairs detected on Rapa Iti in 2019 (Thibault and Withers 2019), and only eight occupied burrows in July 2022 (Withers et al. Reference Withers, Laitame and Tehau2023). This count was not exhaustive and some more pairs probably subsist on the islet or on other remote places on the island. The Rapa Shearwater is therefore listed as “Critically Endangered” (BirdLife International 2024) and its drastic decline is presumably related to the presence of introduced mammals, including chick predation by Pacific rats Rattus exulans (Withers et al. Reference Withers, Laitame and Tehau2023), cat predation, and grazing of breeding slopes by goats (Thibault and Varney Reference J.-C and Varney1991).
Fisheries bycatch is also a potential issue affecting the species at sea, so that a better knowledge of the oceanic regions visited by the Rapa Shearwater is needed to test further this hypothesis (for other Puffinus species see Hatch et al. Reference Hatch, Wiley, Murray and Welch2016; Uhlmann et al. Reference Uhlmann2003). In the context of an endemic tubenose species critically facing extinction, it was decided to track the year-round distribution of the species, to identify the oceanic regions where they exploit marine resources, then to assess the potential changes and challenges they might face there. Indeed, unravelling the at-sea distribution of such seabirds is crucial for their conservation. Bird remote tracking has been used first in large tubenoses (Jouventin and Weimerskirch Reference Jouventin and Weimerskirch1990), but now the miniaturisation of embarked technologies allows the tracking of even the smallest species (e.g. storm-petrels; Militão et al. Reference Militão, Sanz-Aguilar, Rotger and Ramos2022). Given the critical status of Rapa Shearwater, and its small size and body mass, we decided to deploy light loggers fixed on a leg ring, expected to limit the long-term impact on birds (Kim et al. Reference Kim, Priddel, Carlile, Merrick and Harcourt2014), to collect light intensity data, and to reconstruct the distribution of the returning birds whose tags could be retrieved. We present here the analysis of data collected by a single light logger to document the at-sea distribution of an adult Rapa Shearwater during a complete non-breeding season.
Methods
Deploying tags
In August 2019, 10 light loggers (Intigeo W65-A9-SEA from Migrate Technology, see www.migratetech.co.uk) recording light intensity at five-minute intervals were deployed on adult shearwaters captured in their burrow on Rapa Iti. Tags were clamped on to a plastic ring placed on the bird’s tibia, altogether weighing 1.2 g, representing less than 0.6% of a bird’s body mass (average body mass mean ± SD = 210 ± 20 g for 15 adults weighed during the breeding season at Rapa). One tag was retrieved the following year and delivered useful data. The carrying adult bird was caught in a burrow on 31 August 2019, then recaptured in the open nearby the burrow of the previous year on 22 July 2020. Another individual wearing a logger was spotted on 1 August 2020 but could not be captured. DIREN (the local environmental authority) authorised the study (decree n°010978/MCE/ENV).
Light data analyses
We followed the guidelines of Lisovski et al. (Reference Lisovski, Bauer, Briedis, Davidson, Dhanjal‐Adams and Hallworth2020) to perform the light data analyses. First, we used a threshold method to identify sunrise and sunset events with the R package “TwGeos” (Lisovski et al. Reference Lisovski, Sumner and Wotherspoon2015). In this step, we looked for errors on twilight events that we manually corrected when necessary. Days spent in the burrow (complete darkness during the day) were easily identified from visual inspection of raw light data and were used to delineate the non-breeding period (see Supplementary material Figures S1 and S2). We quantified the error distribution of sunrise/sunset times by using twilights from a known location (i.e. the location where the bird had been tagged: -27.61, -144.36). More specifically, we used the periods between 23 September and 5 October and between 1 March and 2 March as calibration periods. The two periods were chosen from visual inspection of the deviation of raw light data from the expected sunrise and sunset times at the deployment site (see Figure S1). we used the getElevation function from the “GeoLight” package to perform the calibration, following the guidelines of Lisovski et al. (Reference Lisovski, Bauer, Briedis, Davidson, Dhanjal‐Adams and Hallworth2020).
Then, we used the group model of the package “SGAT” (Wotherspoon et al. Reference Wotherspoon, Sumner and Lisovski2016) to estimate geographical positions. The group model uses known stationary periods to estimate a single location from multiple twilight events. First, we used the changelight function from the package “Geolight” (Lisovski and Hahn Reference Lisovski and Hahn2012) to separate periods of residency from periods of movement, based on changes in sunrise and sunset times. The function uses the difference in day length to estimate movement periods given a change probability q. Due to the high sensitivity of changelight function to data quality, we ran the analyses with different parameters. We fixed a minimum stationary period of three days and tested a probability of change (q) of 0.7, 0.8, and 0.9. The identified stationary periods were then merged using the function mergeSites from the “Geolight” package (Lisovski and Hahn Reference Lisovski and Hahn2012). We fixed the first and last location as known locations (i.e. the deployment site) and first ran a modified Gamma model (relaxed assumptions) for 1,000 iterations to initiate the model, before running the model with final priors (three runs of 300 iterations). Finally, the model was run for 2,000 iterations to ensure convergence.
Fishing effort
We downloaded daily fishing effort for the period 2018–2020 from the global fishing watch database (Kroodsma et al. Reference Kroodsma, Mayorga, Hochberg, Miller, Boerder and Ferretti2018). Each daily data file contains a list of cells at a 10th degree resolution with the fishing hours that occurred per day in each cell. We estimated the number of days of fishing activity over the period 2018–2020 in each cell of the grid when the fishing hours for a day was greater than 0.
Results
Breeding season and burrow attendance
Visualising light-intensity data collected by the logger allows the identification of the day spent in the dark, e.g. in a burrow, by the shearwater (see Figure S2). Days in a burrow are inferred by the absence of light in a 24-hour period. The bird stayed never more than two consecutive days in a burrow, so did not incubate an egg in 2020. The first day in a burrow occurred on 4 March 2020, then days spent in a burrow were: 12 and 13 March, 31 March, 19 April, 5 and 6 May, 17 and 18 May, 29 and 30 May, 8 and 9 June, 19 June, and 19 July. With 15 days spent in a burrow during five months (March–July), the bird visited the islet on average once every 10 days.
Non-breeding range
The regions of highest presence probability during the non-breeding season were concentrated between 140°W and 120°W in longitude, and 30°S and 45°S in latitude, so 1,000–2,000 km south-east of the breeding site on Rapa Island (Figure 1A). The at-sea occurrence also evolved during the non-breeding season, being concentrated around Rapa Island in October, and being the furthest south-east in January (Figure 1B). Three modelled paths over the non-breeding period estimated with different values of probability of change (q) are presented in Figure S3. The map of fishing activities in the region is presented in Figure S4.
Discussion
Having deployed 10 loggers on adult shearwaters visiting a breeding colony, one might have expected more than one logger to be retrieved. A second equipped bird was observed but could not be recaptured, resulting in a detection rate of 20%. This is low for a long-lived seabird but can be explained by the very low burrow occupancy since 2020 on Rapa Iti with no more than eight occupied burrows (Withers et al. Reference Withers, Laitame and Tehau2023). Moreover, access to Rapa Island was difficult and reduced during the COVID pandemics, and access to Rapa Iti is constrained by meteorological conditions during the breeding season. Finally, the data collected by the retrieved logger attested that the returning adult did not breed in 2020, but attended the colony, with visits occurring every one to four weeks. Hence, the probability that a tagged bird and a scientist do meet on the islet should not be far from 20%. We therefore do not consider that tagging had a notable impact on the fate, survival or breeding capability of the birds. The non-breeding range reported here is therefore highly dependent on the single tracked individual, though we considered it was worth publishing the information, given the critical conservation status of the species. Observed results should however be confirmed by further tracking of a few individuals.
Tubenoses worldwide face a variety of threats, including historical and traditional harvest, introduced mammals, fisheries-related mortality, and disease (Dias et al. Reference Dias, Martin, Pearmain, Burfield, Small and Phillips2019). The monitoring on the few breeding sites frequented by the Rapa Shearwater at Rapa Island identified several threats impacting directly the breeding performance of the species: free-ranging goats were grazing on breeding islets, while Pacific rats were present with confirmed chick predation (Withers et al. Reference Withers, Laitame and Tehau2023). However, the goats were removed between 2019 and 2021 and rat eradication was implemented in 2023 on the main breeding islet of Rapa Iti and Tauturou. Success of this operation is not yet known and will be checked mid-2025. The Polynesian Ornithological Society SOP Manu and BirdLife International also plan to remove rats from Karapoo Rrahi (another breeding site for the Rapa Shearwater). However, a more thorough feasibility plan with rope-climbing is needed before carrying out this project. A remaining important topic for fighting the imminent extinction of the species is to evaluate the risk faced at sea and linked to potential fisheries-related mortality, which was the objective of the present study.
Among petrels and shearwaters breeding in the South Pacific many have been tracked with light loggers. All tracking studies illustrated that these tubenoses move to predictable prey patches around physical oceanographic features such as shelf- and ice-edges and upwellings (Weimerskirch Reference Weimerskirch2007), where humans also gather to exploit marine resources, fisheries being particularly active and a potential threat as bycatches. Sooty Shearwaters Ardenna grisea from New Zealand move to the northern hemisphere (Shaffer et al. Reference Shaffer, Tremblay, Weimerskirch, Scott and Thompson2006). In the temperate South Pacific, Gould’s Petrels Pterodroma leucoptera leucoptera from Australia, P. leucoptera caledonica from New Caledonia, and Pycroft’s Petrel P. pycrofti from New Zealand all disperse northwards to the equatorial Pacific (between 20°N and 20°S), from March to November (Rayner et al. Reference Rayner, Carlile, Priddel, Bretagnolle, Miller and Phillips2016). Murphy’s Petrels Pterodroma ultima from Henderson Island move to the North Pacific (mainly north of 40°N) during the non-breeding season (Clay et al. Reference Clay, Phillips, Manica, Jackson and Brooke2017). The Black-winged Petrel Pterodroma nigripennis is another summer-breeding gadfly petrel of the South Pacific moving to the northern hemisphere to winter (Rayner et al. Reference Rayner, Gaskin and Taylor2023). On Rapa Island, it occupies the same burrows as Rapa Shearwater but during the austral summer. Westland Petrel Procellaria westlandica from New Zealand is the only tracked species to move eastwards towards the south Chilean waters (Landers et al. Reference Landers, Rayner, Phillips and Hauber2011). In this context, the south-eastwards move of the tracked Rapa Shearwater appears original, while the oceanic region exploited by this individual during the non-breeding season in not concerned by noticeable fishery activities. Further tracks are needed before considering that fisheries-related mortality is not a threat for the Critically Endangered Rapa Shearwater. Meanwhile, we advise that conservation efforts should first focus on securing mammal-free sites for breeding colonies.
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at http://doi.org/10.1017/S0959270924000182.
Acknowledgements
We are highly indebted to the local authorities and community on Rapa Island, including the tavana (mayor, Tuanainai Narii), the Tohitu (council of elders), the Tomite Rahi, and the environmental NGO Raumatariki. We thank BirdLife International Conservation Leadership Program and David and Lucille Packard, which funded the field work. We also thank Jacob González-Solís for sharing his experience on tag attachment to small Puffinus. We thank Dr Matt Rayner and Robert Flood for their review of an earlier version of the manuscript.