Back to Top

Author Archives: Geoff Edwards

Giant bird-eating centipedes

On Phillip Island, off Norfolk Island’s south side, the population of Phillip Island Centipedes (Cormocephalus coynei) can kill and eat up to 3,700 seabird chicks each year. Luke Halpin and colleagues tell the story in an article in The Conversation on 3 August 2021.

Giant bird-eating centipedes exist — and they’re surprisingly important for their ecosystem

Luke Halpin, Monash University; Rohan Clarke, Monash University, and Rowan Mott, Monash University

Giant bird-eating centipedes may sound like something out of a science-fiction film — but they’re not. On tiny Phillip Island, part of the South Pacific’s Norfolk Island group, the Phillip Island centipede (Cormocephalus coynei) population can kill and eat up to 3,700 seabird chicks each year. And this is entirely natural. This unique creature endemic to Phillip Island has a diet consisting of an unusually large proportion of vertebrate animals including seabird chicks.

Phillip Island in the Norfolk Island group, with a valley of iconic Norfolk Island Pine trees.
Luke Halpin

As large marine predators, seabirds usually sit at the top of the food chain. But our new study, published in The American Naturalist, demonstrates this isn’t always the case. We show how large, predatory arthropods can play an important role in the food webs of island ecosystems. And the Phillip Island centipede achieves this through its highly varied diet.



A well-armed predator stirs in the night

This centipede can grow to almost one foot (or 30.5cm) in length. It is armed with a potent venom encased in two pincer-like appendages called “forcipules”, which it uses to immobilise its prey. Its body is protected by shield-like armoured plates that line each of the many segments that make up its length. On warm and humid nights, these strictly nocturnal arthropods hunt through thick leaf litter, navigating a labyrinth of seabird burrows peppered across the forest floor. A centipede on the prowl will use its two ultra-sensitive antennae to navigate as it seeks prey.

The centipede hunts an unexpectedly varied range of quarry, from crickets to seabird chicks, geckos and skinks. It even hunts fish — dropped by seabirds called black noddies (Anous minuta) that make their nests in the trees above.

A frightful discovery

Soon after we began our research on the ecology of Phillip Island’s burrowing seabirds, we discovered chicks of black-winged petrels (Pterodroma nigripennis) were falling prey to the Phillip Island centipede. We knew this needed further investigation, so we set out to unravel the mystery of this large arthropod’s dietary habits.

Black-winged petrel chick just prior to being weighed on Phillip Island.
Trudy Chatwin

To find out what these centipedes were eating, we studied their feeding activities at night and recorded the prey species they were targeting. We also monitored petrel chicks in their burrow nests every few days, for months at a time. We eventually began to see consistent injury patterns among chicks that were killed. We even witnessed one centipede attacking and eating a chick. From the rates of predation we observed, we calculated that the Phillip Island centipede population can kill and eat between 2,109 and 3,724 petrel chicks each year. The black-winged petrels — of which there are up to 19,000 breeding pairs on the island — appear to be resilient to this level of predation.

Envenomation of a black-winged petrel nestling by a Phillip Island centipede. (Video by Daniel Terrington)

And the predation of black-winged petrels by Phillip Island centipedes is an entirely natural predator-prey relationship. By preying on vertebrates, the centipedes trap nutrients brought from the ocean by seabirds and distribute them around the island. In some sense, they’ve taken the place (or ecological niche) of predatory mammals, which are absent from the island.

Luke Halpin monitoring black-winged petrel chicks on Phillip Island.
Trudy Chatwin

Restoration and recovery

Up until just a few decades ago the Phillip Island Centipede was very rare. In fact, it was only formally described as a species in 1984.

After an intensive search in 1980, only a few small individuals were found. The species’s rarity back then was most likely due to severely degraded habitats caused by pigs, goats and rabbits introduced by humans to the island. The removal of these invasive pests enabled black-winged petrels to colonise. Their population has since exploded and they’re now the most abundant of the 13 seabird species that breed on Phillip Island. They provide a high-quality food source for the Phillip Island centipede and have therefore likely helped centipede population to recover.

Black-winged petrels on Phillip Island are active both during the day and at night. (Video by Luke Halpin)

Ancient bone deposits in the soil suggest that prior to the black-winged petrel’s arrival, Phillip Island was home to large numbers of other small burrow-nesting seabird species. It’s likely the Phillip Island centipede preyed on these seabirds too. Now, thanks to the conservation efforts of Norfolk Island National Park, the island’s forest is regenerating alongside endemic species like the centipede, as well as the critically endangered Phillip Island hibiscus (Hibiscus insularis).

The endemic Phillip Island hibiscus.
Luke Halpin

As a driver of nutrient transfer, the persistence of the Phillip Island centipede (and its healthy appetite) might just be key to the island’s ecosystem recovery. But we’ll need to do more research to fully understand the intricate links in this bustling food web.


The Conversation


Luke Halpin, Ecologist, Monash University; Rohan Clarke, Director, Monash Drone Discovery Platform, and Senior Lecturer in Ecology, Monash University, and Rowan Mott, Biologist, Monash University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons licence. Read the original article.

Reef Life Survey

Reef Life Survey is a non-profit citizen science program in which trained SCUBA divers undertake standardised underwater visual surveys of reef biodiversity on rocky and coral reefs around the world.

A team of five divers visited Norfolk Island in February/March 2021 to replicate two previous surveys. See the Coral reefs page. Group coordinator Antonia Cooper has advised that it would be wonderful if some Norfolk Islanders who are capable at diving would be willing to form a local group of volunteers to continue and expand the surveys. Science education is not required.

Given the threats to coral reefs world-wide from land-based pollution, over-fishing and, in particular, climate change, isolated reefs surrounded by deeper water such as those around Norfolk become particularly valuable as reference points. Reef Life Survey would welcome contact from Islanders willing to join this unique form of citizen science.


Posted in Get Involved |

Kentia Palm

Williams, Kevin. 2007. Seed to Elegance: Kentia Palms of Norfolk Island, South Pacific. Norfolk Island: Studio Monarch. Purchase via https://kentiapalmchronicles.wordpress.com/.

 

The palms that are common around Norfolk Island are the Kentias, Howea belmoreana and Howea forsteriana, endemic to Lord Howe Island but not Norfolk, which has its own endemic palm Rhopalostylis baueri.

School teacher TB Wilson of Lord Howe Island deposited a quantity of Kentia Palm seeds at Norfolk Island in 1881. Palm seeds were exported from Lord Howe Island to England from about 1898 to meet demand from the greenhouse trade. The palm was found to flourish indoors and became a favourite houseplant of the European nobility and reportedly a particular favourite of Queen Victoria. Williams reports that in 1899 some 2 million seeds were auctioned in London.

From the early 1900s, supply was diversified to include Norfolk. Pitcairn descendant Ivens ‘Pullis’ Nobbs is credited with pioneering the Kentia industry, after his return from World War II.

Williams describes the Kentia as “the most common ornamental palm species in the world” because it requires little maintenance or light. Norfolk still supplies 90% or more of all Kentia products sold via the international flower auction house in Aalsmeer, The Netherlands.

Posted in Introduced Flora |

Lost and found: Snails thought extinct are alive

A land snail listed more than 20 years ago as extinct was re-discovered in October 2020 by researchers from the Australian Museum. The Norfolk Island Flora and Fauna Society hosted a presentation on 22 October by Dr Isabel Hyman, supported by Dr Frank Köhler from the Museum and Brett Finlayson from Taronga Park Zoo. These investigators spent time during their visit surveying vegetation and plant debris in the parks and forests for these fascinating creatures. The ABC has the story.

Posted in Snails |

Bird list for Norfolk Island

The Society ran a bird survey across the island group in 2005, the first time since 1978 that the birds have been monitored methodically for their presence and distribution. Visiting volunteer bird watchers and professionals came to the Island from Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the United Kingdom to assist.

 

A provisional Bird List indicating extinct, endemic and native species has been compiled and is available free of charge.


Posted in Birds |