About Microcarbo melanoleucos (Vieillot, 1817)
The little pied cormorant, scientifically named Microcarbo melanoleucos (Vieillot, 1817), is a small cormorant that measures 56–58 cm (22–23 in). Compared to the little black cormorant, it has a shorter 3 cm (1.2 in) bill and a longer tail, and it also has a small black crest. In New Zealand, the species occurs in two different plumage morphs. Subspecies melanoleucos and brevicauda only occur in the pied morph, which is black (with a faint green tinge) on the upper body and white on the underbody. The pied morph is also present in subspecies brevirostris, but for this subspecies, the melanistic morph is much more common. In the melanistic morph, the entire plumage is black with a greenish tinge, except for the sides of the head, chin, throat, and upper neck; the bill is yellow with black on the upper portion. Intermediate plumage forms also occur. The pied morph has glossy black upperparts, with a white face, white underparts, and white thighs; the bill and bare skin around the face are yellow. In both morphs, the legs and feet are black. The pied morph is rare in New Zealand, and it is most common in the Northland region of the country, where it accounts for roughly one out of every four little pied cormorants. Chicks have dark brown down; pied morph chicks have patches of paler down. Immature birds are a dull blackish brown, and pied morph immature birds have paler underparts. During courtship, the little pied cormorant produces a low cooing sound. Similar species include the slightly larger black-faced cormorant and the substantially larger Australian pied cormorant. The little pied cormorant's range covers all of New Zealand, from Stewart Island to Northland, as well as all of mainland Australia (excluding the arid interior of western Australia) and Tasmania. It is also found in Papua New Guinea, Palau, Timor-Leste, the Solomon Islands, New Caledonia, and Vanuatu. In eastern Indonesia, its range includes Sulawesi, the Lesser Sunda Islands, the Maluku Islands, and Western New Guinea; non-breeding individuals have been recorded in Java, Bali, and once off the coast of East Kalimantan. The species is widespread and common, and it lives near bodies of water including swamps, lakes, lagoons, estuaries, and coastlines.