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Antipodes snipe

Subspecies of bird

Antipodes snipe

Summary

Subspecies of bird

  • *Coenocorypha meinertzhagenae *

The Antipodes snipe (Coenocorypha aucklandica meinertzhagenae), also known as the Antipodes Island snipe, is an isolated subspecies of the Subantarctic snipe that is endemic to the Antipodes Islands, a subantarctic island group south of New Zealand in the Southern Ocean.

Taxonomy and etymology

The Antipodes Island snipe was first collected by Fairchild in 1887, and by Andreas Reischek in 1888.

Description

The Antipodes Island snipe is similar to the nominate subspecies – the Auckland Island snipe – but differs in being darker above and with yellower underparts.

Distribution and habitat

The snipe is endemic to the Antipodes group, which has a total surface area of 22 km2. It has been recorded not only from the main Antipodes Island, but also from the much smaller Bollons, Archway and Inner Windward Islands. It inhabits the islands’ tussock grasslands and herbfields, nesting under tussocks and Polystichum vestitum shield ferns.

Behaviour

Breeding

Antipodes snipe eggs

Breeding is seasonal, with egg-laying beginning in mid to late August. The typical clutch size is two.

Feeding

The snipe have been recorded as feeding on a variety of invertebrates, including annelids, amphipods, isopods, arachnids and insects.

Status and conservation

The population of the snipe is estimated at 8,000 birds. It has been classified as a range-restricted island endemic with a stable population.

References

Notes

Sources

References

  1. It was first described by Walter Rothschild in 1893 as ''Gallinago tristrami'' in honour of [[Henry Baker Tristram]]. However, doubts were raised about the provenance of the type specimen, which appeared to be from the Auckland Islands, and Rothschild made a new description in 1927, recognising the Antipodes Island form as a subspecies of ''Coenocorypha aucklandica''. The subspecific name honours [[United Kingdom. British]] [[ornithology. ornithologist]] [[Annie Meinertzhagen]], the second wife of ornithologist [[Richard Meinertzhagen]].Hartert (1927).
  2. Oliver (1955).
  3. Higgins & Davies (1996).
  4. “[[Hakawai (mythology). Hakawai]]” aerial displays have been recorded.Miskelly ''et al''. (2006).
  5. Melville & Battley (2006).
  6. Miskelly et al. (2008).
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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