Otago University News
By John Gibb on Mon, 17 Oct 2011
Prof Jon Waters takes a close look at a stuffed yellow-eyed
penguin at the Otago Museum. Photo: Peter McIntosh
It has been third time lucky for University of Otago
zoologist Prof Jonathan Waters as he starts investigating
whether some of our native coastal species, including the
yellow-eyed penguin, really are native.
Prof Waters said it was "great" that an $878,000 grant which
he had recently received from the Marsden Fund would enable
him to investigate how animals responded to human impacts,
and how many of New Zealand's coastal species were actually
new arrivals from overseas.
Yellow-eyed penguins, for instance, apparently arrived in New
Zealand only in the past 500 years, replacing a prehistoric
penguin species, the waitaha, that was wiped out shortly
after human settlement, he said.
One of his former Otago PhD students, Dr Sanne Boessenkool,
undertook earlier research several years ago and discovered
remains of the extinct waitaha penguin.
It is suggested that some yellow-eyed penguins made their way
north from their native Auckland Islands and Campbell Island
and later established themselves on the Otago Peninsula and
elsewhere on the Otago coast after the waitaha penguin became
extinct.
Many people would be surprised the yellow-eyed penguin may
not have been living in Otago as long as previously believed,
he said.
"We tend to think that things that are here now are things
that have been here for a long time," Prof Waters said.
The kind of extinction-recolonisation events apparently
involved with such penguins may be the rule rather than the
exception in coastal New Zealand, including with sea-lions
and little blue penguins, he said.
It was "great" to be able to pursue the research, after two
earlier recent attempts to gain Marsden funding for the
project had been unsuccessful.
The little blue penguins which had now established themselves
on the Otago coast, after earlier being largely wiped out by
humans, were in fact penguins from Australia.
They were different from endemic little blue penguins found
elsewhere on the New Zealand mainland.
New Zealand sea lions found on the Otago coast were also not
the same creatures that once previously existed there, but
were apparently a replacement population from the
subantarctic islands, researchers said.
Collaborators in the project are Prof Lisa Matisoo-Smith, of
the Otago anatomy department, and Dr Paul Scofield, of the
Canterbury Museum.
The researchers will use carbon dating and state-of-the-art
DNA analysis of prehistoric bones to shed further light on
the country's "dramatic biological history", and to conduct a
biological audit of prehistoric New Zealand.
Archaeologists would be teaming up with geneticists, in order
to "reveal exciting aspects of New Zealand's past - stories
that were previously impossible to tell," he said.
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