Publications by authors named "Chris Lalas"

Article Synopsis
  • Understanding prehistoric human effects on biodiversity is crucial for biologists and archaeologists.
  • The study of New Zealand’s Stewart Island Shag shows that, while it once thrived across coastal South Island, human arrival around 1280 AD led to significant population declines in the southeast lineage.
  • In contrast, the southern lineage has remained stable since human settlement, indicating varying levels of human impact across different regions.
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Demographic rates, such as annual survival rate, are generally difficult to estimate for long-lived seabirds, because of the length of time required for this kind of study and the remoteness of colonies. However, a small colony of northern royal albatross (Diomedea sanfordi) established itself on the mainland of New Zealand at Taiaroa Head, making possible regular banding and monitoring of its individuals since the first chick fledged, in 1938. Data on the presence/absence of birds, as well as on breeding outcomes, were available for the period from 1989-90 to 2011-12, and included 2128 annual resightings of 355 banded individuals of known age.

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New Zealand's endemic Stewart Island Shag (Leucocarbo chalconotus) comprises two regional groups (Otago and Foveaux Strait) that show consistent differentiation in relative frequencies of pied versus dark-bronze morphotypes, the extent of facial carunculation, body size and breeding time. We used modern and ancient DNA (mitochondrial DNA control region one), and morphometric approaches to investigate the phylogeography and taxonomy of L. chalconotus and its closely related sister species, the endemic Chatham Island Shag (L.

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