Royal penguin

Eudyptes chrysolophus (Brandt, 1837)

Order: Sphenisciformes

Family: Spheniscidae

New Zealand status: Native

Conservation status: Vagrant

Other names: macaroni penguin

Geographical variation: Two subspecies: the pale-faced royal penguin (E. c. schlegeli) breeds near New Zealand on Macquarie Island, while the nominate dark-faced form (macaroni penguin E. c. chrysolophus) breeds on islands near Cape Horn, in the South Atlantic Ocean, and in the southern Indian Ocean. The royal penguin is sometimes treated as a full species.

Royal penguin. Subdult ashore to moult. Anchorage Bay, Antipodes Island, March 2009. Image © Mark Fraser by Mark Fraser

Royal penguin. Subdult ashore to moult. Anchorage Bay, Antipodes Island, March 2009. Image © Mark Fraser by Mark Fraser

Royal penguins are the largest of the crested penguins, and are endemic to Macquarie Island, an Australian-administered subantarctic island south-west of New Zealand. They are easily recognised by their white faces, massive orange bills, and scruffy orange-yellow crests that meet on the forehead. Royal penguins are rare vagrants to New Zealand, but have occurred as far north as Napier. The dark-faced nominate subspecies (macaroni penguin) is a very rare vagrant to New Zealand. It was given its name by 19th century sailors after members of the ‘Macaroni Club’, a pejorative term for young men with outlandish tastes or fashion sense. 

Identification

Royal penguins are large crested penguins, approaching the size of yellow-eyed or gentoo penguins. They differ from all other crested penguins in that most birds have white faces (sometimes pale grey or dark gray). The dark-faced 'macaroni' subspecies shares their enormous orange bill, prominent pink skin at the bill base, and scruffy orange-yellow crests that meet on the forehead. This last character is contra all other crested penguins, which have two separate crests that do not meet on the forehead. The remaining upperparts are blue-black, and the underparts silky white. Immature birds have a less robust, darker bill and reduced crest, but always have some chrome yellow feathers on the forehead. The eye is red-brown, and the legs and feet pink with black soles.

Voice: like other crested penguins, very noisy at colonies. The main call is a deep, throbbing bray or trumpeting. The contact call is a short bark.

Similar species: chinstrap penguin is the only other white-faced penguin, but has no crest. The erect-crested penguin is almost as large as the (dark-faced) macaroni penguin, and also has a black face and long, robust orange bill, but has paired crests that do not meet on the forehead.

Distribution and habitat

Like most penguins, royal penguins only come to land when required to breed or moult. They breed at Macquarie Island only, and are rarely recorded on land away from there. Colonies on Macquarie Island are situated on the coast and on slopes up to 200 m. Macaroni penguins breed abundantly on islands situated close to the Antarctic convergence (Polar Front) in the Atlantic and Indian Ocean sectors of the Southern Ocean. South Atlantic breeding sites include South Georgia, and South Sandwich and South Orkney Islands, with populations in the Falkland Islands and southern Chile also. In the Indian Ocean sector macaroni penguins breed on Crozet, Kerguelen, Marion, Prince Edward, Heard and McDonald Islands. There are no populations in the Pacific sector, where the macaroni penguin is replaced by the conspecific royal penguin, and further north by the erect-crested penguin (the next largest crested penguin).

Population

The total population of royal penguins is estimated at around 1,600,000 birds, with the 57 colonies ranging in size from 60 to more than 160,000 pairs. Vagrant birds are occasionally recorded on New Zealand subantarctic islands, the New Zealand mainland (mainly Otago), Tasmania, South Australia, the Ross Sea sector of Antarctica, and South Georgia. The total population of macaroni penguins is estimated at just under 9 million pairs. The largest populations are on South Georgia (c.2.5 million pairs, formerly 5.5 million pairs), Crozet (2.4 – 3.9 million pairs), Kerguelen (c.1.8 million pairs), Heard Island (c.1 million pairs) and McDonald Island (c.1 million pairs). These numbers may seem large, but the species is in decline and is classified by the IUCN as vulnerable.

New Zealand records

Four North Island records for: Napier (1880-81), Lyall Bay, Wellington (June 1926), Cape Palliser (February 2007) and Tora, Wairarapa (February 2013). South Island records include Brighton, Dunedin (March 1877), Waikouaiti (March 1877), Taiaroa Head (before 1927), Otago Peninsula (1938 and January 2017), Dunedin (March 1976), Moeraki (March 1986), Colac Bay, Southland (February 1997), north of Kaikoura (March 1997), Nugget Point (February 2004), Hampden Beach (February 2006). There is one record from Stewart Island (February to March 2022), one from Whenua Hou/Codfish Island (March 2020), five from Chatham Islands (February 2005, March 2006, March 2009, February 2020, February 2023), three from Snares Islands (February 1986, March 1994, March 2015), two from Antipodes Island (July 1985, March 2009), and at least 4 records from Campbell Island, including 4 birds in January 1968.

Within the New Zealand region, (dark-faced) macaroni penguins have been recorded only on Campbell Island (December 1967 - January 1968, January 1993) and Snares Islands (January 1969, January 1970, November 1974, March 2015).

Threats and conservation

Being confined to a single breeding site, royal penguins are vulnerable to single-site catastrophes such as oil-spills. The population is considered stable at about 850,000 pairs in 57 colonies.

Although there are still very large populations of macaroni penguins, significant declines have been recorded at some of the large breeding sites such as South Georgia and Isla Recalada in southern Chile. Decline has also been observed at the World Heritage Sites of Heard and McDonald Islands. The reasons for the decline is unknown but possible suspects are climate change, impacts of industrial fishing for finfish and krill and shifting distribution and abundance in prey species.

Breeding

Royal penguins breed only on Macquarie Island in large colonies. They arrive in September and lay in October-November. Like all crested penguins, they lay two eggs of markedly different size, with a second larger egg laid about 4 days after the first. As with the two other large crested penguins (macaroni and erect-crested penguins), the egg size dimorphism is extreme, and almost all the small first eggs are lost early in incubation. Only in about 1% of nests does the first egg produce a chick. The five smaller species of crested penguins have less difference in the size of the two eggs, and generally hatch both eggs, with the chick from the smaller egg usually dying of starvation within 10 days. Incubation by royal penguins is shared and takes about 35 days. Both adults feed the chick, with most chicks fledging in late January, when about 65 days old.

Behaviour and ecology

Like most penguins, royal penguins spend most of their lives at sea, coming ashore only to breed and moult. Both during breeding and feeding they are highly social. During the breeding season, foraging trips extend out to 415 km for females and 650 km for males, with durations varying from about 19 days during incubation, down to 5-6 days during chick-rearing. After chicks fledge, adults go to sea for about 36 days, after which they return to their breeding site to moult during February-March, which takes about 4 weeks. Once back at sea after the moult they travel vast distances, up to 10,000 km. The main predators of royal penguins are leopard seals, fur seals and sometimes orcas. Predation rates in the colonies are relatively low, with some unguarded chicks and eggs taken by subantarctic skuas (eggs and chicks), southern black backed gulls (eggs only) and giant petrels (chicks only).

The macaroni penguin is also a social nester, congregating in very large breeding colonies. Territories are established by males in late October just before females arrive. Courtship is intense with the birds displaying mutual head movements, vocalisation and preening. Usually two eggs are laid but the smaller first egg is rejected when the larger second egg is laid. The majority of the care of the chick at the nest is done by the male. The chicks fledge in February to early March, then the adults moult in April-May, after which birds return to sea until October.

Food

The diet of the macaroni penguin consists of krill, fish and squid. During breeding, the female does most of the foraging until the end of the guard stage, provisioning the chick approximately every two days. Both adults feed the chick for the last 6-7 weeks before it goes to sea. Outside the breeding season, macaroni penguins range over long distances foraging for food. They have been recorded diving up to 100 metres depth, but most dives are much shallower. Royal penguins feed predominantly on Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba), which make up about 90% of the diet during the breeding season. At other times, fish can make up to 30% of the diet.

Websites

BirdLife factsheet (Royal penguin)

BirdLife factsheet (Macaroni penguin)

Wikipedia (Royal penguin)

Wikipedia (Macaroni penguin)

http://www.photovolcanica.com/PenguinSpecies/Royal/RoyalPenguinPhotos.html

References

Baker, A.J.; Pereira, S.L.; Haddrath, O.P.; Edge, K.A. 2006. Multiple gene evidence for expansion of extant penguins out of Antarctica due to global coolingProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 273(1582): 11-17.

Bost, C.A.; Thiebot, J.B.; Pinaud, D,; Cherel, Y.; Trathan, P.N. 2009. Where do penguins go during the inter-breeding period? Using geolocation to track the winter dispersion of the macaroni penguin. Biology Letters 5: 473-476.

Green, K.; Williams, R.; Green, M.G. 1998. Foraging ecology and diving behavior of macaroni penguins Eudyptes chrysolophus at Heard IslandMarine Ornithology 26: 27-34.

Heather, B.D.; Robertson, H.A. 2005. Field guide to the birds of New Zealand. Penguin Group (NZ) Ltd.

Hull, C.L. 1999a. Comparison of the diets of breeding royal (Eudyptes schlegeli) and rockhopper (Eudyptes chrysocome) penguins on Macquarie island over three years. Journal of Zoology 247: 507-529.

Hull, C.L. 1999b. The foraging zones of breeding royal (Eudyptes schlegeli ) and rockhopper (E. chrysocome) penguins: an assessment of techniques and species comparison. Wildlife Research 26: 789-803.

Hull, C.L.; Wilson, J.; le Mar, K. 2001. Moult in adult royal penguins Eudyptes schlegeli. Emu 101: 173-176.

Marchant, S.; Higgins, P.J. (eds.), 1990. Handbook of Australian, New Zealand and Antarctic birds. Vol., ratites to ducks. Melbourne, Oxford University Press.

Miskelly, C.M.; Crossland, A.C.; Sagar, P.M.; Saville, I.; Tennyson, A.J.D.; Bell, E.A. 2017. Vagrant and extra-limital records accepted by the Birds New Zealand Records Appraisal Committee 2015-2016. Notornis 64: 57-67.

Shirihai, H. 2007. A complete guide to Antarctic wildlife: the birds and marine mammals of the Antarctic continent and the Southern Ocean. 2nd edn. London: A & C Black.

St Clair, C.C.; Waas, J.R.; St Clair, R.C.; Boag, P.T. 1995. Unfit mothers? Maternal infanticide in royal penguins. Animal Behavior 50: 1177-1185.

Williams, TD (1995). The penguins: Spheniscidae. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Woehler, E.J. 1993. The distribution and abundance of Antarctic and subantarctic penguins. Cambridge, United Kingdom: SCAR/ Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research. ISBN 0-948277-14-9.

Recommended citation

Ellenbroek, B.; Davison, M. 2022 (updated 2023). Royal penguin. In Miskelly, C.M. (ed.) New Zealand Birds Online. www.nzbirdsonline.org.nz

Royal penguin

Social structure
monogamous
Breeding season
  • Jul
  • Aug
  • Sep
  • Oct
  • Nov
  • Dec
  • Jan
  • Feb
  • Mar
  • Apr
  • May
  • Jun
Nest type
ground-level hollow
Nest description
Shallow depression among stones, sand or mud
Nest height (mean)
0 m
Nest height (min)
0 m
Nest height (max)
0 m
Maximum number of successful broods
1
Clutch size (mean)
2
Clutch size (min)
2
Clutch size (max)
2
Mean egg dimensions (length)
75.5 mm
Mean egg dimensions (width)
55 mm
Egg colour
chalky white
Egg laying dates
  • Jul
  • Aug
  • Sep
  • Oct
  • Nov
  • Dec
  • Jan
  • Feb
  • Mar
  • Apr
  • May
  • Jun
Interval between eggs in a clutch
4-6 days days
Incubation behaviour
shared
Incubation length (mean)
35 days
Incubation length (min)
32 days
Incubation length (max)
37 days
Nestling type
semi-precocial
Nestling period (mean)
21 days
Age at fledging (mean)
65 days
Age at independence (mean)
65 days
Age at first breeding (typical)
10 years
Age at first breeding (min)
5 years
Maximum longevity
Unknown
Maximum dispersal
10,000 km