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Frigatebird
chick, Kure Atoll
(Photo: H. Eijzenga) |
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The
Great Frigatebird is an unparalleled flying machine.
They are highly specialized for an aerial life,
having a greater ratio of wing area to body mass
than any other bird, a deeply forked tail for agile
maneuvering, and very small legs and feet (which
make walking impractical). They are among the few
seabirds that are sexually dimorphic in plumage as
well as in size with adult females weighing almost
one-third more than males. Males are entirely black
above, with long, metallic green and purple scapular
feathers. Their inflatable red gular pouches are
used for mating displays and fade to a pale orange.
Juvenile plumage lasts between five and nine years
and is extremely variable, tending to be primarily
black with much white. The rufous feathers on
juveniles’ heads, necks, and breasts disappear after
the first few years. Their long, slender wings,
deeply forked tails and saber-like bills render
frigatebirds unmistakable in the field. |
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Breeding (Dec-Oct)
Great Frigatebirds range widely over the warm waters
of the Indian and Pacific oceans but are restricted
to Trinidad and Marin Vas in the tropical Atlantic.
They breed on or visit all island groups in the
tropical Pacific except Palau, ranging between 28ºN
(Kure) and 25ºS (Pitcairn). In Hawaii, they nest in
on all the Northwest Hawaiian Islands except Gardner
Pinnacles and roost on Moku Manu (Oahu), Kaula and
Lehua (Niihau) in the main Islands.
Marine
Frigatebirds are non-migratory residents that do not
wander far from their breeding islands. Residents
return to land to roost on still evenings when air
currents are unfavorable but otherwise may soar all
night. |
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Frigatebirds lay a single egg on a loosely woven but
substantial platform of sticks, twigs, vines, and
leaves which they build near tops of trees or
shrubs. In
Hawaii, they typically nest on Tree Heliotrope (Tournefortia
argentea) and naupaka (Scaevola sericea).
Courtship begins in December, peaks between December
and April and usually ceases by May. Egg-laying
commonly occurs in the colony over a 5 – 6 month
span with a peak in March – May. There is a 55 day
incubation period with most juveniles fledging by
October. Frigatebirds have the longest post-fledging
parental care period of any species of bird with
adults continuing to feed young up to a year after
fledging. Unlike many seabirds, pairs usually switch
partners every breeding season, likely because
females often only nest every two to four years.
Both parents incubate the single egg, and brood and
feed the chick. Birds first breed at eight to ten
years of age. |
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§
Feeding guild
– PELECANIFORMES
§
Food capture
– Frigates have a highly specialized feeding method-they use their long,
hooked bills to snatch prey on the wing or during brief contact with the
water. Because of a structural inability to take off again if they
settle on the water (not a lack of oil glands and associated
waterlogging), frigates are limited to snatching prey from surface
waters, probably no deeper than the length of a bill. Early writers
emphasized kelptoparasitism as frigatebirds’ sole method of feeding.
This behavior inspired both its Hawaiian and English names: iwa means
“thief” and “frigate” refers to the fast ships used by pirates. However,
frigates in Hawaii
earn most of their living by honest fishing; piracy is primarily a
supplementary activity of females or of juveniles that are struggling to
learn a highly specialized type of aerial feeding.
§
Foraging Distribution – They are pelagic feeders during both the breeding and
nonbreeding seasons and generally feed out of sight of land. Little is
known about their distribution due to limited at-sea data, but they have
been found primarily in tropical and subtropical areas, in highly saline
waters with surface temperatures ≥22°C. Frigatebirds probably feed at
oceanographic features (e.g., upwellings, divergences, convergences)
that bring nutrient-rich, cooler, deeper waters to the surface or that
concentrate nutrients.
§
Microhabitat for foraging – Usually solitary at sea, yet when ephemeral food is
available they will join fairly large flocks of other species,
especially Sooty terns (Sterna fuscata)
and Wedge-tailed Shearwaters
(Puffinus Pacificus) that feed over foraging schools of tuna
(e.g., Katsuwonus and Euthynnus spp.), other predatory
fishes, or dolphins (Stenella, Delphinus, and Steno
spp.), which drive smaller fish to surface, where they are available to
frigatebirds. Less commonly, they forage on land, taking small seabird
chicks (less often eggs) from exposed nests.
§
Diet –
Frigates’ diet in
Hawaii
includes about six-sevenths fish and one-seventh flying squid, together
with the occasional juvenile Sooty Tern. Although crustaceans are
occasionally found in frigates’ stomachs elsewhere, none have turned up
in Hawaiian samples. Frigates take fish of a particularly wide range of
sizes from a thumbnail-size cowfish to a halfbeak over 8 inches in
length. Flyingfish are the most common family of fish taken, especially
Cypselurus spp. and Linne’s flyingfish. Mackerel scad are
frequently eaten during summer and fall. Some prey is taken primarily at
certain locations or during certain months. For example, frigates
consume many Pacific sauries near Midway during winter and numerous
small fantail filefish near Laysan during summer, but eat neither of
them in other areas or during other seasons. Frigates also may eat
hatchling green sea turtles, Gray-backed Terns (Sterna lunata),
fledgling shearwaters (Puffinus spp.), and other young birds. |
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Fossils of Great Frigatebirds chicks have been found
along coastal Oahu and Kauai indicating that they
once nested on the main islands. This species is
very sensitive to human disturbance and currently
nests only in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands.
The
world population is estimated at 500,000 - 1,000,000
individuals. Frigates rarely begin to breed until
they are at least nine years old, so a substantial
portion of the population consists of nonbreeders.
The total Hawaiian population consists of 64,000
individuals, of which 20,000 are breeders. The
largest breeding colonies occurring on Nihoa (3,500
- 4,500 pairs) and Laysan (2,000 - 2,500 pairs).
Smaller colonies in Northwest Hawaiian Islands
include French Frigate Shoals (350 - 375 pairs),
Necker (700 - 900 pairs), Lisianski (750 - 850
pairs), Pearl and Hermes Atoll (300 - 400 pairs),
and Kure Atoll (200 - 250 pairs).
§
Habitat degradation and loss – Probably the most significant conservation problem for
Hawaiian Great Frigatebirds is the loss of nesting
vegetation, as on Laysan and Lisianski early in the
twentieth century when rabbits were introduced. The
frigate population on Laysan may still not have
attained its former level because the naupaka
(Scaevola sericea) there has never completely
recovered.
§
Disturbance at nest sites – Frigates are particularly disturbed by human intruders in
their colonies. Uncontrolled human activities not
only can cause reproductive failure in the year of
disturbance but can result in the abandonment of an
entire colony. Frigates once nested on Sand Island,
Midway, but have not done so for decades, likely as
a result of intense and regular disturbance there.
§
Fisheries –
In Hawaii, overfishing may directly or indirectly
harm seabird populations; harvest of skipjack and
yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacare) could
eliminate predatory fish needed to drive prey
species to the surface. |
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Division of Forestry and Wildlife (DOFAW). 2005.
Hawaii’s Comprehensive Wildlife Conservation
Strategy. Div. Of Forestry and Wildlife, Dept. of
Land and Natural Resources, Honolulu, HI.
www.state.hi.us/dlnr/dofaw/cwcs/process_strategy.htm
Harrison, C.S. 1990. Seabirds of Hawaii. Cornell
University Press, Ithaca.
Metz
VG, Schreiber EA. 2002. Great frigatebird (Fregata
minor) In The Birds of North America, No.
681 (Poole A, Gill F, editors.). Philadelphia, (PA):
The Academy of Natural Sciences; and Washington DC:
The American Ornithologists' Union.
Olson, S.L. and H.F. James. 1982. Prodromus of the
fossil avifauna of the Hawaiian Islands. Smithsonian
Contributions to Zoology No. 365.
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