Demographic parameters and at-sea distribution of New Zealand sea lions breeding on the Auckland Islands (POP2007/01)

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Demographic parameters and at-sea distribution of New Zealand sea lions breeding on the Auckland Islands (POP2007/01) Auckland Islands research trip, December 2 nd 2008 to February 16 th 2009 (Final report, November 2009) Dr. Louise Chilvers Marine Conservation Section Aquatic and Threats Unit Department of Conservation This report outlines the work completed in the 2008/09 New Zealand sea lion research field trip to the Auckland Islands for the Conservation Services Programme (CSP). The period covered in this report is from December 2 nd 2008 when the first team arrived on Enderby Island through to the departure of the second team from the Island on February 16 th 2009. This work continues annual surveys of the Auckland Island breeding sites of the New Zealand sea lions (Phocarctos hookeri). Objectives The objectives 1 of the work reported here were: 1. To collect field data that will allow quantification and estimation of: - pup production, - survival of previously marked New Zealand sea lions, - reproduction by known-age female New Zealand sea lions; 2. To maintain and update the New Zealand sea lion database; 4. To make available field data for relevant modelling work; and 5. To characterise at-sea distribution of poorly known age and sex classes of New Zealand sea lions. Logistics The scientific trip was split into two parts: December 2nd - January 10th, and January 10th - February 16th. The breaks in the field season permitted changes in personnel during the summer. The first science team comprised of three people: Nathan McNally (DOC Otago), Amelie Auge (Otago University) and Kelly Buckel (Massey University). The second team comprised of six people: Louise Chilvers (DOC, MCT), Katja Geschke (Wellington Zoo), Laureline Meyneir (Massey University), Jacinda Amey (DOC contractor), Jim Fyfe (DOC Otago) and Rob Hood (DOC Tongariro Taupo). Transport during the season was aboard the Evohe under charter to DOC. All personnel were accommodated in the two huts at Sandy Bay and the Apple Hut at Dundas Island. Sea lion counts Daily counts were undertaken for pups (live and dead) from 2 nd December 2008 to 15 th February 2009 and for adults at Sandy Bay from the 2 nd December 2008 to January 20 th 2009. Adult and pup counts were undertaken daily at South East Point between 2 nd December 2008 and 20 th January 2009 and then weekly until the 15 th February 2009. Counts were made at approximately one week intervals at East Bay and other areas around Enderby Island. One five day trip was 1 For further details see the Conservation Services Annual Plan 2007/08 available at: http://www.doc.govt.nz/publications/conservation/marine-and-coastal/marine-conservation-services/cspplans/archive/2007-2008/approved-csp-annual-plan-2007-08/ 1

made to Dundas Island. during the season to count, tag and resight animals. Figure of Eight Island was counted on January 10th with 26 females, 17 males, and 48 live and 6 dead pups being recorded. Resightings were also conducted by the NZ sea lion team on the main Auckland Island from Kekeno to Ross Harbour and throughout the harbour area including Rose & Ewing Islands (see Figure 1). SE Point Ross Harbour Figure of Eight Figure 1: The Auckland Islands showing areas where sea lions were sighted: Figure of Eight, Dundas, Enderby, Ewing, Rose and Auckland Islands. 2

Pup production estimate Estimates of pup production were calculated for the breeding sites in the Auckland Islands between 10 Jan to 21 Jan 2009 (Tables 1 and 2). Mark recapture methods (see Chilvers et al 2007 for detailed methodology) have been used to estimate of pup production from Sandy Bay and Dundas Island, while Figure of Eight Island and South East Point areas were estimated using direct counts. The total pup production estimate was 1501 ± 16 (Fig. 2). On the 16 th of January, the mark-recapture estimate at Sandy Bay was 289 ± 2. There were 12 dead pups from the area at the 16 th January giving a total pup production for Sandy Bay for the 2008/2009 season of 301 ± 2. The mark recapture estimate at Dundas Island was completed on 21 st January 2009 with an estimation of 1065 live pups ± 16. 67 dead pups were counted on the island on the same day giving a total pup production for Dundas Island of 1132 ± 16. Direct counts from Figure of Eight Island on the 10 th Jan yielded a count of 48 pups + 6 dead giving a total of 54. The direct count at South East Point yielded 8 live pups + 6 dead giving a total of 14 pups. The estimate of pup production from the Auckland Islands was 31% lower than that seen in 2007/08. Pup mortality during the first 4 weeks of the 2008/ 09 season from all studied locations was 6% (Table 2). Pup mortality at Sandy Bay was 4% at 16 th January and was 12% by 15 th Feb 2009. 3200 3000 2800 Pup Production 2600 2400 2200 2000 1800 1600 1400 1200 1996/97 1997/98 1998/99 1999/00 2000/01 2001/02 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06 2006/07 2007/08 2008/09 Season Figure 2. Annual pup production for the Auckland Islands 1996/97 to 2008/09. 3

Table 1: Pup production estimates for Auckland Islands Season Sandy Bay Dundas Island Figure of Eight Island South East Point total alive dead total Alive Dead Total alive dead total alive Dead 97/98 477 468 9 2373 1748 625 120 97 23 51 37 14 98/99 513 473 40 2186 1957 229 109 100 9 59 42 17 99/00 506 482 24 2163 2039 124 137 131 6 50 37 13 00/01 562 527 35 2148 1802 346 94 92 2 55 47 8 01/02 403 320 83 1756 1395 361 96 90 6 27 21 6 02/03 489 408 80 1891 1555 336 95 89 5 43 26 17 03/04 507 473 34 1869 1749 120 87 86 1 52 39 13 04/05 441 411 30 1587 1513 74 83 79 4 37 31 6 05/06 422 383 39 1581 1349 232 62 55 7 24 20 4 06/07 437 414 23 1693 1587 106 70 67 3 24 19 5 07/08 448 425 23 1635 1512 123 74 72 2 18 13 5 08/09 301 289 12 1132 1065 67 54 48 6 14 8 6 Table 2: Total pup production from the Auckland Islands (NB. These estimates do not include an estimate of pup production from Campbell Island). Season Annual pup production % Annual change in no. pups born % Mortality at mark recapture estimate date % Mortality at end of season (SB only) Total Alive Dead Total SB only 97/98 3021 2350 671 1.5% 22.2% 2% 42% 98/99 2867 2572 295-5.1% 10.3% 8% 9% 99/00 2856 2689 167-0.4% 5.8% 5% 11% 00/01 2859 2468 391 0.1% 13.7% 6% 10% 01/02 2282 1826 456-20.2% 20.0% 21% 33% 02/03 2518 2078 438 10.3% 17.4% 16% 21% 03/04 2515 2347 168-0.001% 6.7% 8% 15% 04/05 2148 2034 114-14.6% 5.3% 7% 12% 05/06 2089 1807 282-2.8% 13.5% 9% 16% 06/07 2224 2087 137 6.4% 6.2% 5.3% 16% 07/08 2175 2022 153-2% 7% 5.1% 14% 08/09 1501 1410 91-31% 6% 4% 12% 4

Pup tagging Pups have been tagged to provide a pool of known age individuals for the estimation of parameters such as survival, recruitment and reproductive rate as part of the long-term study. Tags applied were pink coffin shaped Dalton Jumbo tags with a letter and three-digit number combination. All pups were tagged in both flippers. All live pups at both Sandy Bay (301) and South East Point (8), and 400 pups (100 males and 300 females) at Dundas Island were tagged. 25 pups were tagged on Figure of Eight Island with Green Dalton tags. 183 pups were captured approximately 4 weeks after tagging at Sandy Bay and checked for tag loss, 2 pups had lost tags (one lost one tag, the other lost both tags) giving a probability of losing a single tag of 0.8% within 4 weeks. Tag loss over the first 4 weeks during the years of use of Dalton tags has been 0.3%, 0.2%, 0.5%, 0.2%, 0.4%, 1.4%, 0.6%, 1.3%, 3.5% and 0.8%. This year s lower tag loss relative to 2007/08 was the result of changing the position in tag placement on the pups flipper due to the larger tag pin size as noticed last year, and this change appears to have had successful results for tag retention. The change in tag position was minor, predominantly moving the tag placement approximately 1 cm further away from the pups flipper edge to compensate for the larger tag pin. The result of the small change in tag placement meant that the distance between the flipper edge and tag pin is now similar to what it was before the tag pin size was increased. Number of cows breeding and daily pup:cow ratios As in previous seasons, daily counts of all animals and resights of tags and brands on NZ sea lions were undertaken on Enderby Island to understand the composition of animals at this breeding site and to enable the calculation of survivability, recruitment and fecundity of animals. Checks were undertaken on Enderby Island with 5500 resights made on 963 animals previously tagged or branded (including 287 individuals identified from a chip). We had a significantly higher chip sighting rate this year. Effort for chipping resighting was normal, the increase appeared to be due to a new more effective chip reader bought last year allowing better chip reading ability. Figure 3 and 4 represent a comparison of the daily number of females ashore at Sandy Bay in 2008/9 (Fig. 3) and pup:cows ashore ratios (Fig. 4) with the previous seasons. As can be seen in Figure 3 the daily counts of females ashore was significantly down compared with the 2007/08 season. 410 Number of cows ashore 360 310 260 210 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 160 29-Dec 31-Dec 2-Jan 4-Jan 6-Jan 8-Jan 10-Jan 12-Jan 14-Jan 16-Jan 18-Jan date Figure 3. Numbers of females recorded ashore each day between 29 th December and 18 th January for the years 2003/04 to 2008/09. 5

Ratio of pups per cow 2.6 2.4 2.2 2 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 29-Dec 31-Dec 2-Jan 4-Jan 6-Jan 8-Jan 10-Jan 12-Jan 14-Jan 16-Jan 18-Jan Date Figure 4. Pup:cow ratio at Sandy Bay between 29 December and 18 January for the years 2003/04 to 2008/09. 3500 450 Pup Production 3000 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 AI pup production Ave # females ashore 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 Ave # females ashore SandyBbay 0 0 1997/98 1998/99 1999/00 2000/01 2001/02 2002/03 2003/04 Season 2004/05 2005/06 2006/07 2007/08 2008/09 Figure 5. Auckland Island pup production compared with the average number of females seen ashore each day between 27 th Dec (mean pupping date) and 2 nd Jan at Sandy Bay, Enderby Island. 6

600 450 Pup production 500 400 300 200 100 pup production Ave females ashore 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 Ave # females ashore 0 0 1997/98 1998/99 1999/00 2000/01 2001/02 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06 2006/07 2007/08 2008/09 Season Figure 6. Sandy Bay pup production compared with the average number of females seen ashore each day between 27 th Dec (mean pupping date) and 2 nd Jan at Sandy Bay, Enderby Island. Figures 5 & 6 compare pup production for the Auckland Islands and Sandy Bay, Enderby Island, with the average number of females seen ashore at Sandy Bay each day between 27 th December (mean pupping date) and 2 nd January. This period is chosen because it is the period when maximum numbers of females will be present ashore (69% of all births occur a week either side of the 27 th December (Chilvers et al. 2006) and these dates are before the period when female start foraging trips therefore numbers start to fluctuate (Fig. 3)). These graphs clearly show the relationship between the numbers of females present at the harems and the numbers of pups born. The number of females sighted at Sandy Bay this year was considerably lower than any other year since 1997/98 (Table 4). There has been a downward trend in females present at Sandy Bay (and presumably all other colonies) particularly in the last 5 years. Table 4. Number of females seen ashore each day between 27 th Dec (mean pupping date) and 2 nd Jan at Sandy Bay, Enderby Island. Season Ave. # female ashore Sandy Bay Minimum Maximum 97/98 368 355 388 98/99 342 300 393 99/00 390 374 413 00/01 320 303 352 01/02 316 303 352 02/03 363 326 388 03/04 372 335 389 04/05 294 226 337 05/06 325 253 355 06/07 307 289 337 07/08 308 283 340 08/09 209 190 225 Figures 7 & 8 show daily number of adult males (determined by size and mane development) and all males (adult and sub-adult) ashore at Sandy Bay in 2008/09. Overall the number of adult males sighted each day appeared relatively normal compared to other years, however it appeared 7

that the number of sub-adult males was lower than normal giving an overall slightly lower number of males sighted daily on Sandy Bay than in the last five years. 250 200 Number of Bulls ashore 150 100 50 0 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 24 Dec 25 Dec 26 Dec 27 Dec 28 DEC 29 Dec 30 Dec 31 Dec 1 Jan 2 Jan 3 Jan 4 Jan Date 5 Jan 6 Jan 7 Jan 8 Jan 9 Jan 10 Jan 11 Jan 12 Jan 13 Jan 14 Jan 15 Jan 16 Jan 17 Jan Figure 7. Numbers of adult males recorded ashore each day between 20 th December and 17 th January for the years 2003/04 to 2008/09. 350 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 300 250 Total number of males 200 150 100 50 0 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 24 Dec 25 Dec 26 Dec 27 Dec 28 DEC 29 Dec 30 Dec 31 Dec 1 Jan 2 Jan 3 Jan 4 Jan Date 5 Jan 6 Jan 7 Jan 8 Jan 9 Jan 10 Jan 11 Jan 12 Jan 13 Jan 14 Jan 15 Jan 16 Jan 17 Jan Figure 8. Numbers of all males recorded ashore each day between 20 th December and 17 th January for the years 2003/04 to 2008/09. 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 8

Maintenance and updating the NZ sea lion database and making available the 2008/09 field data for relevant modelling work Resight data has been entered into the NZ sea lion database and verified. Data has been extracted and provided to CSP contractors for the estimation of demographic parameters (CSP Project POP2007/01 Objective 3). Juvenile satellite tagging 2009 In January and February 2009 ten juvenile sea lions (4 male and 6 female) between the age of 2 and 5 years were captured at Sandy Bay, Enderby Island. Tags were deployed for between 9 and 38 days (Table 5). Figure 9a, b & c show satellite locations of these animals. Table 5. Dates, tag number, satellite tag identification, sex, age, weight, length, girth, number of days deployed and number of satellite locations received from 10 juvenile sea lions captured January 2008. Date Tag Satellit e tag id Sex Age Weight Length Girth Days Number of satellite locations 11/01/2009 4907 1757 M 5 117 184 107 14 138 15/01/2009 7458 49093 F 2 57 140 90 13 105 15/01/2009 6363 76964 F 3 79 165 98 10 135 19/01/2009 6485 67260 M 3 85 159 98 12 208 19/01/2009 7610 76965 F 2 54 140 84 25 316 20/01/2009 6214 54760 M 3 81 160 104 13 139 20/01/2009 6218 54761 M 3 76 155 92 38 570 20/01/2009 6536 76963 F 3 70 157 93 19 235 25/01/2009 7445 89574 F 2 53 138 83 9 149 25/01/2009 8023 49094 F 2 54 135 84 17 206 Table 6. Age and sexes of juvenile animals satellite tagged 2007/2008 and 2008/2009. Age 2 3 4 5 Male 0 3 2 3 Female 5 7 NA NA The analysis of this NZ sea lion distribution data in a fisheries context will be reported at a later date. Acknowledgements We are grateful for the significant logistical support provided throughout the whole trip from DOC Southland, particularly Sharon Trainor, Kathryn Pemberton, Pete McClelland, Gilly Adams and Andy Roberts. We also appreciate the helpful and friendly radio schedules coordinated by Stewart Island staff. Funding was provided by the Department of Conservation's Conservation Services Programme (www.csp.org.nz) project POP2007/01 by the Department of Conservation and through a levy principally on the quota holders of SQU 6T. 9

References Chilvers BL, Robertson BC, Wilkinson IS, Duignan PJ (2006) Growth and survival of New Zealand sea lions, Phocarctos hookeri: birth to 3 months. Polar Biology 30:459-469 Chilvers BL, Wilkinson IS, Childerhouse, S (2007) New Zealand sea lion, Phocarctos hookeri, pup production 1995 to 2006. New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 41: 205-213. 10

Figure 9a Satellite locations of juvenile male NZ sea lions 4907, 6485, 6214 & 6218. N 250 m 500 m 25 km 11

Figure 9b Satellite locations of juvenile female NZ sea lions 7445, 8023 & 6363. N 250 m 500 m 25 km 12

Figure 9c Satellite locations of juvenile female NZ sea lions 6536, 7458 & 7610. N 250 m 500 m 25 km 13