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Spatial organization of the North Island Brown Kiwi Apteryx australis mantelli: sex, pairing status and territoriality
Authors:BARBARA TABORSKY  MICHAEL TABORSKY
Affiliation:Konrad Lorenz-Institut für Vergleichende Verhaltensforschung, Savoyenstrasse 1a, A-1160 Wien, Austria
Abstract:In Waitangi State Forest, 51 North Island Brown Kiwi Apteryx australis mantelli were tagged with radio transmitters and observed for an average of 2.3 months. All females and the majority of males were paired and maintained territories of 6.7 and 5.5 ha, respectively. Territories overlapped widely between partners but only narrowly with those of paired neighbours. Unpaired males had territories of 12.8 ha and extensively overlapped those of paired males. Territories were maintained by long distance calls and rare aggressive encounters. Males were more territorial than females. Within pairs, males called 1.5 times more often than females and initiated most pair calls. 60% of female calls were responses to their mates. Observers could often induce aggressive behaviour (calling, fast approach) in male kiwi (by playback, for example) but hardly ever in females. Kiwi territoriality cannot be explained by the distribution and availability of food and shelter sites, but seems to serve mainly a reproductive function.
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