April 16, 2018 Seabird Riches on the Poor Knights April 16, 2018/ Abby McBride Sketch biologizing on the seabird-rich Poor Knights Islands! That's a shearwater chick I'm holding (see bottom left image), which one obtains by lying face-down in the dirt and sticking one's arm down a burrow (see bottom right image), while hoping not to get bitten by a lurking tuatara (see previous Instagram post). I sketched a little story about the trip—link in bio—but really you have to hear this place to believe it. Luckily, RNZ's Alison Ballance came with us. Here's her podcast, in which I dubiously make my second-ever appearance on national New Zealand radio: http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/ourchangingworld/audio/2018639901/seabird-hotspot-the-poor-knights-islands. Photos: Alison Ballance/RNZ. A post shared by Abby McBride (@sketchbiologist) on Apr 17, 2018 at 2:51am PDT The rugged coast of Aorangi Island, home to thousands of Buller’s shearwaters that nest underground in the forested interior, visiting the island only at night to feed their chicks. These elusive seabirds will make an appearance in my next post... A post shared by Abby McBride (@sketchbiologist) on Mar 4, 2018 at 6:23pm PST Sketched in the pre-dawn darkness, by headlamp light: Buller’s shearwaters on the Poor Knights Islands, the only place in the world where these seabirds nest. They crash-landed through the forest canopy at dusk, wriggled into their burrows to feed their chicks, and for the last several hours have been hanging out on the forest floor making a ruckus around our tents. At first light they’ll fly back to sea in a mass exodus. The island will suddenly become quiet. (Then the bellbirds will start up with the dawn chorus.) A post shared by Abby McBride (@sketchbiologist) on Mar 5, 2018 at 6:27pm PST