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Wednesday 8 April 2020 9:20am

Hatchling tuatara image
One of the hatchling tuatara, which has already lost the shell-breaker from its snout. Photo credit: Alison Cree.

Two tuatara hatchlings have recently been sighted at Orokonui Ecosanctuary by University of Otago researchers and are the first to be seen since adult tuatara were released at the ecosanctuary in 2012.

Although tuatara hatchlings have been reported in fenced ecosanctuaries on the North Island, these hatchlings may be the first to hatch as part of a viable tuatara population on Te Waipounamu (the South Island) for several hundred years.

The hatchlings at Orokonui were found earlier this year under small strips of roofing material by Jade Christiansen, an undergraduate student working on a Te Ngaru Paewhenua: Māori and Pacific Science Summer Studentship at the University of Otago.

“My hands were shaking,” Ms Christiansen says. “I was very nervous, yet very excited. The hatchlings can be surprisingly lively. One of them still had its horny ‘shell-breaker’ – a projection on the tip of its snout – so I knew it had hatched recently.”

Professor Alison Cree, of Otago’s Department of Zoology, leads the research group that has been researching the tuatara population for over seven years. A recent Masters student, Jemima Gardiner-Rodden, had been monitoring the nest for over 16 months.

Ms Gardiner-Rodden says it’s likely these hatchlings are female due to the long duration of incubation in the nest and the relatively cool soil temperatures. Nest temperatures are known to determine the sex of developing tuatara embryos.

Further evidence at the nest such as empty eggshells with distinctive splits suggests there may also be additional hatchlings from this clutch. Female tuatara nest only every few years and average-sized females lay a clutch of about nine eggs.

Orokonui Ecosanctuary’s Conservation Manager Elton Smith says this discovery is yet another significant biodiversity outcome for the sanctuary. "This success can be directly attributed to our fence that excludes all introduced mammals (other than perhaps mice) that would otherwise predate upon the tuatara,” Mr Smith says.

Professor Cree says that evidence of offspring being produced is an important stage to reach when re-establishing a viable population, and that a breeding population at Orokonui could be a valuable contribution to protecting the survival of this taonga species in the global climate emergency.

“We’ve been excited to see tuatara surviving and growing, and we’ve long suspected that hatching was occurring based on indirect evidence, including split eggshells,” Professor Cree says.

“But this is the first direct evidence for the entire cycle through to hatching, from egg-yolk production onwards in the mother’s body, taking place at Orokonui.”

Nelson-based Ngāti Koata are kaitiaki (guardians) for the source population of tuatara for Orokonui, and Kāti Huirapa Rūnaka ki Puketeraki as mana whenua are tangata tiaki for the ecosanctuary.

“We’re thrilled for tuatara, for Orokonui and for our iwi partners who’ve been so supportive of this project,” Professor Cree says.

Orokonui Ecosanctuary is currently closed due to Covid-19 but staff are still carrying out essential tasks.

For more information, contact:

Professor Alison Cree
Department of Zoology
University of Otago
Email alison.cree@otago.ac.nz
Tel +64 3 466 7295

Amanda Symons
General Manager
Orokonui Ecosanctuary
Mob +64 27 557 9109

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