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News and media for ZEALANDIA: The Karori Sanctuary Experience Wellington New Zealand

 

LO-V against the odds at ZEALANDIA

A young kākā chick runt at ZEALANDIA - once presumed so close to death his nest-minders had a body bag ready for him - has delighted conservationists at the ecosanctuary by hanging on to life - with some sisterly help from his nestmates!

Aroha with Bill
© Judi Lapsley Miller

Aroha (named after the Māori word for love) was banded with the colours Lime over Orange on the left leg, and laVender on the right (LO-V). Lavender being this year’s cohort colour for the species.

“Most of the band combos this year don’t make good acronyms but that one had to go to a very special bird” said volunteer kākā nest monitor coordinator Judi Lapsley Miller. “We named him Aroha and I’m sure his sisters would agree with the sentiment – they are very protective of him.”

The runt, who is too young to be sexed but has so far been referred to as a “he”, came from the last, unusually late egg to be laid in a clutch of five.

“Kākā usually lay an egg every second day until they get three, and then start incubating. They then lay up to two more as insurance policies, continuing on the every-second-day cycle. So it's usual to have a laggard in the nest, but it's usually only up to 4 days younger than the others and soon catches up” said Lapsley Miller.

Staff assumed the fifth egg was a dud. But to everyone’s surprise, in early December the small chick was spotted.

2 December
© Bill Beale

“The fourth (which we’d usually refer to as the runt) soon caught up to the rest, but the fifth (Aroha) struggled. We all assumed the worst - that it was too much younger and wouldn't be able to compete for food and would die” said Lapsley Miller.

Voluntary nest monitors Bill Beale and Elizabeth Ridder were checking the progress of the clutch.
 
“Initially it wasn't thriving. I would turn up for nest checks with bags and gloves at the ready to remove the body. But its siblings were very protective of it and somehow it managed to start putting on weight and feathers” said Beale.

11 Dec
© Bill Beale

Around 7 days younger than his oldest sibling, Aroha is also developmentally further behind, having failed to thrive in the first few weeks but doing better later on. When microchipped on 15 January he was “feisty and interested in the world”, but still much smaller than a normal kaka chick.

Aroha is not out of the woods yet. Once the older chicks fledge the mother will still be feeding them all and if they move too far away from the nest box, she may have trouble provisioning everyone.

Conservation Manager Raewyn Empson said “Based on survival of chicks that have fledged from nestboxes in the sanctuary in previous years this chick has at least a 50% chance of survival, possibly higher”

… will LO-V find a way?

Extra information:

More photos on Flickr

Aroha’s parents are founder birds at Zealandia (RR-P "Ruby" and P-WB "Arnie"), who have been breeding since 2003.
 
Aroha is still too little to sex. The other chicks in the nest are all thought to be girls. Kaka chicks can be sexed by using DNA from their feathers, but at ZEALANDIA we don't often use that method (to minimise expenses) - bill length can be a good indicator of probable sex, especially in combination with other measurements such as wing length, but is not always 100% accurate. We usually regard the sex of kaka as uncertain until they begin nesting.

Why lavender? We have used nine different band colours to denote a cohort, with a different cohort colour each breeding season, this being the tenth. But we are running out of options and might need to re-use a colour next season.

About ZEALANDIA

ZEALANDIA is managed by Karori Sanctuary Trust, a not-for-profit charitable community trust. It has a 500-year vision to restore this corner of New Zealand as closely as possible to the way it was ‘the day before humans arrived’.

Founded in 1995, in 1999 it became the world’s first fully-fenced eco-sanctuary. It has, to date, re-introduced 17 locally or nationally-endangered species into a wild state, including tuatara, little spotted kiwi, hihi and giant weta. As a result of these successes, at least 14 other fenced projects have been established in New Zealand.

In 2010 the Prime Minister opened the new $18m ZEALANDIA Visitor Complex, New Zealand’s first facility fully-dedicated to showcasing NZ natural history and the story of our conservation movement. State-of-the-art interactive exhibits enable visitors to ‘step back in time 1,000 years and experience a long-lost world.

ZEALANDIA is recognised around the world, not only for the groundbreaking work it is doing to turn back the clock, but also for the way it engages both locals and visitors in conservation. In 2009 it was recognised by the Global Restoration Network as one of the top 25 eco-restoration projects in Australasia, and in 2010 it received a prestigious Virgin Holidays Responsible Tourism Award at the World Travel Market in London. It has been consistently listed by The Rough Guide as one of New Zealand’s top attractions and was recently included in The Guardian’s Green Travel Guide as one of the top 75 green tourism companies in the world.

For more information on this news story please contact:

Lauren Schaer
Communications & Marketing Coordinator
+64 4 920 9205

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