Unidentified eggs, Mt Climie (Upper Hutt)
Posted: Sat May 24, 2025 2:22 pm
Hi all,
On the 13th of February I was up on the summit of Mt Climie (Upper Hutt) conducting bird counts for the regional council. The summit of Mt Climie is vegetated in subalpine shrubs, herbs and tussocks, and the lower slopes are covered in montane beech and kamahi forest.
At two separate spots near the Mt Climie summit I came across small, uniform white eggs sitting on the ground in the subalpine vegetation. Both eggs were perfectly intact, giving me the impression that they'd been 'dumped' by a gravid bird that didn't have anywhere else to lay them.
As a bit of a diversion, I spent my lunch break that day browsing NZ birds online on my phone, attempting to match up the colour and size of these eggs with potential suspects likely to be found up on Mt Clime, and I didn't manage to come up with a convincing answer.
Rather carelessly, I let the matter go and thought no more of it until today, when browsing the very popular "Wellington City Biodiversity" thread on this forum, I came across the following post by Christopher Stephens from May 2023, with a photo of an identical egg he found in exactly the same spot:
viewtopic.php?p=54394#p54394
In his post, Christopher mentioned that his egg may have been that of a kākā, and a couple of other people suggested chicken or pheasant, but the identity of this egg seemed to go unresolved at the time.
Christopher didn't provide any measurements for his egg, but I did measure the two that I came across in February, dimensions were as follows:
Egg 1: 33.0 mm x 26.5 mm
Egg 2 32.0 mm x 26.5 mm
And here's a photo of my eggs (the scale bar on left hand side of the image is in cm - click on the photo to enlarge):
What on earth are they?? They're certainly too small for kākā, chicken or pheasant, and at any rate all three species are pretty unlikely to occur on the summit of Mt Climie. I initially wondered whether they were long-tailed cuckoo eggs dumped by a bird that hadn't managed to find a host nest, but they're too large and the wrong colour for LTC. The upper slopes of Mt Climie aren't exactly teeming with birds, so the list of likely suspects among the resident birds is pretty darn small - I went through them all on the day I found the eggs and couldn't find a match. These eggs are too large for any of the passerines, parakeets or eastern rosella (though the egg shape is a good match for the latter) and too small for kererū, rock pigeon or morepork. Thinking outside the box I even started checking seabirds. The measurements seem to be a close match for white-faced storm petrel, but the egg shape doesn't look right to me.
Any thoughts?
Cheers,
Nikki
PS: As an aside I found it rather laborious to trawl through a couple of dozen HANZAB extracts searching likely species for a match to these eggs, and it occurred to me that a matrix table of mean egg lengths vs mean widths for NZ spp would be a really useful resource for identifying mystery eggs such as these. Does anyone know whether such a table exists?
On the 13th of February I was up on the summit of Mt Climie (Upper Hutt) conducting bird counts for the regional council. The summit of Mt Climie is vegetated in subalpine shrubs, herbs and tussocks, and the lower slopes are covered in montane beech and kamahi forest.
At two separate spots near the Mt Climie summit I came across small, uniform white eggs sitting on the ground in the subalpine vegetation. Both eggs were perfectly intact, giving me the impression that they'd been 'dumped' by a gravid bird that didn't have anywhere else to lay them.
As a bit of a diversion, I spent my lunch break that day browsing NZ birds online on my phone, attempting to match up the colour and size of these eggs with potential suspects likely to be found up on Mt Clime, and I didn't manage to come up with a convincing answer.
Rather carelessly, I let the matter go and thought no more of it until today, when browsing the very popular "Wellington City Biodiversity" thread on this forum, I came across the following post by Christopher Stephens from May 2023, with a photo of an identical egg he found in exactly the same spot:
viewtopic.php?p=54394#p54394
In his post, Christopher mentioned that his egg may have been that of a kākā, and a couple of other people suggested chicken or pheasant, but the identity of this egg seemed to go unresolved at the time.
Christopher didn't provide any measurements for his egg, but I did measure the two that I came across in February, dimensions were as follows:
Egg 1: 33.0 mm x 26.5 mm
Egg 2 32.0 mm x 26.5 mm
And here's a photo of my eggs (the scale bar on left hand side of the image is in cm - click on the photo to enlarge):
What on earth are they?? They're certainly too small for kākā, chicken or pheasant, and at any rate all three species are pretty unlikely to occur on the summit of Mt Climie. I initially wondered whether they were long-tailed cuckoo eggs dumped by a bird that hadn't managed to find a host nest, but they're too large and the wrong colour for LTC. The upper slopes of Mt Climie aren't exactly teeming with birds, so the list of likely suspects among the resident birds is pretty darn small - I went through them all on the day I found the eggs and couldn't find a match. These eggs are too large for any of the passerines, parakeets or eastern rosella (though the egg shape is a good match for the latter) and too small for kererū, rock pigeon or morepork. Thinking outside the box I even started checking seabirds. The measurements seem to be a close match for white-faced storm petrel, but the egg shape doesn't look right to me.
Any thoughts?
Cheers,
Nikki
PS: As an aside I found it rather laborious to trawl through a couple of dozen HANZAB extracts searching likely species for a match to these eggs, and it occurred to me that a matrix table of mean egg lengths vs mean widths for NZ spp would be a really useful resource for identifying mystery eggs such as these. Does anyone know whether such a table exists?