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View Archived Data collected from
birth to 1 month for 2 Australasian Harriers.
Bird 1
Bird 2
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Australasian Harriers
Breeding Season 1993
Eketahuna, New Zealand
November 27, 1993
The nest was on the side of a deep gorge covered
with native vegetation, not typical of Australasian Harrier
nesting habitat. There were possibly four or five eggs in
the nest, one resting on top of the others. The female returned
to the nest area on two occasions between 5:00 p.m. and 7:30
p.m. The second time the female was frightened off by a low
flying micro-lite. During this interval the male had also
arrived at the site and spent an hour and a half perched on
top of a small pine tree and was constantly harassed by three
and sometimes four magpies. The male glided to the nest site
whilst being chased by magpies, dropped food he was carrying
then immediately pirouetted down to the nest, staying briefly
before flying off again. Observations of the nest site continued
until it was decided to retrieve the eggs from concern that
the nest was abandoned.
The time elapsed from first discovering the nest
when the female flew off to retrieve the eggs was 2 hours
and 40 minutes. By this time the temperature was rapidly dropping.
Only three eggs remained in the nest prompting speculation
that the remaining egg(s) was/were either eaten by predators
or tossed out by the male during his brief visit to the nest.
The eggs were wrapped in newspaper and placed in a conventional
egg carton and were handed over to us by the run holder. By
8:45 p.m. the eggs were placed in a still air incubator which
was maintained at an average temperature of 37.5∞ C
or 99.5∞ F. The eggs were turned by hand three times
per day 8 hours apart.
The measurement of the eggs were as follows:
1.
2. 46.22 cm long x 37.78 cm wide
3. 47.00 cm long x 35.26 cm wide
The eggs were white in colour but had overall
dirty appearance.
At 2:20 p.m. on December 8th a small raised cracked
bump was observed on the side of the shell and cheeping was
heard. On December 9th the pipping was slow and the egg was
checked at 10:00 p.m. At 2:00 a.m. on the 10th and at 5:00
a.m. the chick was assisted out of the shell. The process
took 1 hour. The chick at birth was blind with very little
down covering the body. The soft body parts including most
of the beak was pink and the claws were white. Just a small
portion of the upper mandible was black. The chick was left
inside the incubator and allowed to dry off. Hatch weight
was 23 g. The eyes remained closed for the first day and a
half. After 8 hours the chick was force-fed several small
pieces of ground quail dipped in saline solution.
On the 11th of December at 3:30 p.m. a very small
crack was observed in the second egg but pipping progress
was very slow, most probably due to the drying out of the
membrane inside the shell. Cheeping, although audible at first,
after 12 hours became faint. Also the direction of pipping
was not following the perimeter of the air cell but going
down toward the pointed end of the shell. The egg was checked
at 2:00 a.m. on the 13th of December and again at 4:00 a.m.
Egg shell fragments were removed over a period of two hours
making it possible to assist the chick out. Although some
bleeding occurred and the chick was very weak it was decided
to leave the chick in the incubator with its sibling. At 6:00
p.m. the chick was force-fed several small pieces of quail.
A similar hatch weight of 23 g. was recorded.
By mid-morning on the 14th of December the remaining
egg was beginning to pip but no progress was made for the
remaining 24 hours. The outer membrane of the air cell was
leathery and despite efforts to assist the remaining chick
out on the 15th of December the chick died within a few minutes
of being assisted out.
The remaining chicks increased in size and weight. Refer to
daily notes during feeding regime.

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