Hi all,
Some of Raja's photos from our fantastic trip are on her website at the
following links:
2014 April 12 Seamounts off QLD - adar man photography
2014 April 12 Seamounts off QLD - adar man photography
Highlights: Polynesian Storm-petrel Collard Petrel (magnificens) "New
Caledonia" Storm-petrel (new taxon?)
View on www.adarman.com Preview by Yahoo
2014 April 13 Seamounts off QLD - adar man photography
2014 April 13 Seamounts off QLD - adar man photography
Highlights: Collared (Magnificent) Petrel "New Caledonia" Storm-petrel (new
taxon?) Streaked Shearwater - very obliging individual White-tailed and Re...
View on www.adarman.com Preview by Yahoo
Cheers,
Nikolas
----------------
Nikolas Haass
Brisbane, QLD
________________________________
From: Paul Walbridge <>
To:
Cc: sossa <>
Sent: Friday, April 18, 2014 7:08 AM
Subject: Southport Sea Mount trip 11-14th April 2014.
Hi All, the trip out to the Queensland & Britannia Sea Mounts (our second) last
weekend was highly successful. The main aim was again to locate the enigmatic
'striped bellied' storm-petrels, which we did successfully. Our view now, after
incredibly close views of several birds is that all the sightings thus far in
this region have been definitely NOT New Zealand Storm-Petrels, due to several
factors. The birds we are seeing here most closely resemble the birds being
seen off the southern edge of New Caledonia and loosely referred to as New
Caledonian Storm-Petrel. However, with the majority of sightings of these birds
being sighted in an area both offshore and along open ocean sea mounts adjacent
to Brisbane, down to Ballina in northen New South Wales, in the southern Coral
Sea, it has been suggested we use the term Coral Sea Storm-Petrel for the time
being. That is until ongoing further studies affirm it's correct taxonomic
status, which obviously is
going to take some period of time. I have recorded a total of 38 individuals
now for the region. My friend Chris Collins of the UK is conducting a similar
expedition off New Caledonia in early May and will be stopping over at my place
en route and we will swap notes.
The overall trip was also highly interesting, with some mega sightings.
Although the overall diversity and numbers were down on 2012, there were still
some highly prized sightings. These string of sea mounts, stretching from just
offshore of Fraser Island down to just over the New South Wales border are all
in Australian territorial waters and are proving to be an extremely important
staging/foraging area for a large number of seabird species, some of which have
become increasingly rare and threatened! Below is the 2 day list.
Red-tailed Tropicbird - 1
White-tailed Tropicbird - 6 (3)
Polynesian Storm-Petrel - 1
Wilson's Storm-Petrel - 110 (32)
Coral Sea Storm-Petrel - 25 (7)
White-faced Storm-Petrel - 3 (1)
Wedge-tailed Shearwater - 288 (40)
Flesh-footed Shearwater - 70 (20)
Sooty Shearwater - 2 (1)
Streaked Shearwater - 1
Tahiti Petrel - 86 (15)
Kermadec Petrel - 51 (3)
Great-winged Petrel - 47 (12) all gouldi
Providence Petrel - 12 (2)
Gould's Petrel - 11 (1)
Collared Petrel - 3 (1)
Arctic Jaeger - 2 (1)
Common Noddy - 2 (1)
White Tern - 3 (1)
Sooty Tern - 31 (3)
Cheers - Paul W.
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