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</ref> The ancestral Kakapo migrated to the islands of New Zealand in prehistory; in the absence of [[mammal]]ian predators, it lost the ability to fly. Because of Polynesian and European colonisation and the introduction of predators such as [[cat]]s, [[rat]]s, and [[stoat]]s, most of the Kakapo were wiped out. Conservation efforts began in the 1890s, but they were not very successful until the implementation of the Kakapo Recovery Plan in the 1980s. As of November 2005, surviving Kakapo are kept on four predator-free islands, [[Maud Island|Maud]], [[Chalky Island|Chalky (Te Kakahu)]], [[Codfish Island|Codfish (Whenua Hou)]] and [[Anchor Island|Anchor]] islands, where they are closely monitored.<ref name="Powlesland2006"/> Two large Fiordland islands, [[Resolution Island, New Zealand|Resolution]] and [[Secretary Island|Secretary]], have been the subject of large-scale [[Island restoration|ecological restoration]] activities to prepare self-sustaining [[ecosystem]]s with suitable habitat for the Kakapo.
</ref> The ancestral Kakapo migrated to the islands of New Zealand in prehistory; in the absence of [[mammal]]ian predators, it lost the ability to fly. Because of Polynesian and European colonisation and the introduction of predators such as [[cat]]s, [[rat]]s, and [[stoat]]s, most of the Kakapo were wiped out. Conservation efforts began in the 1890s, but they were not very successful until the implementation of the Kakapo Recovery Plan in the 1980s. As of November 2005, surviving Kakapo are kept on four predator-free islands, [[Maud Island|Maud]], [[Chalky Island|Chalky (Te Kakahu)]], [[Codfish Island|Codfish (Whenua Hou)]] and [[Anchor Island|Anchor]] islands, where they are closely monitored.<ref name="Powlesland2006"/> Two large Fiordland islands, [[Resolution Island, New Zealand|Resolution]] and [[Secretary Island|Secretary]], have been the subject of large-scale [[Island restoration|ecological restoration]] activities to prepare self-sustaining [[ecosystem]]s with suitable habitat for the Kakapo.


The conservation of the Kakapo has made the species well known. Many books and documentaries detailing the plight of the Kakapo have been produced in recent years. Two of the most significant documentaries, both made by [[NHNZ]], are ''Kakapo - Night Parrot'' (1982) and ''To Save the Kakapo'' (1997). The [[BBC]]'s Natural History Unit also featured the Kakapo, including a sequence with [[Sir David Attenborough]] in ''[[The Life of Birds]]''. It was also one of the endangered animals that [[Douglas Adams]] and [[Mark Carwardine]] set out to find for the radio series and book ''[[Last Chance to See]]''.
The conservation of the Kakapo has made the species well known. Many books and documentaries detailing the plight of the Kakapo have been produced in recent years. One of the earliest television documentaries to feature the Kakapo was ''Two in the Bush'', made by [[Gerald Durrell]] for the [[BBC]] in [[1963]]. Two of the most significant documentaries, both made by [[NHNZ]], are ''Kakapo - Night Parrot'' (1982) and ''To Save the Kakapo'' (1997). The [[BBC]]'s Natural History Unit also featured the Kakapo, including a sequence with [[Sir David Attenborough]] in ''[[The Life of Birds]]''. It was also one of the endangered animals that [[Douglas Adams]] and [[Mark Carwardine]] set out to find for the radio series and book ''[[Last Chance to See]]''.


The Kakapo, like many other bird species, has historically been important to the Māori, the indigenous people of New Zealand, appearing in many of the traditional legends and folklore.
The Kakapo, like many other bird species, has historically been important to the Māori, the indigenous people of New Zealand, appearing in many of the traditional legends and folklore.

Revision as of 07:07, 27 July 2007

Kakapo
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Subfamily:
Tribe:
Strigopini
Genus:
Strigops

Gray, 1845
Species:
S. habroptilus
Binomial name
Strigops habroptilus
Gray, 1845

The Kakapo (Māori: kākāpō, meaning night parrot), Strigops habroptilus (from the Greek strix, genitive strigos: owl and ops: face; and habros: soft, and ptilon: feather), also called owl parrot, is a species of nocturnal parrot with finely blotched yellow-green plumage endemic to New Zealand.[1] It has a distinct facial disc of sensory, vibrissa-like feathers, a large grey beak, short legs, large feet, and wings and a tail of relatively short length. A certain combination of traits makes it unique among its kind—it is the world's only flightless parrot, the heaviest parrot, nocturnal, herbivorous, it sports visible sexual dimorphism in body size, has a low basal metabolic rate, no male parental care, and is the only parrot to have a polygynous lek breeding system. It is also possibly one of the world's longest-living birds.[2] Its anatomy typifies the tendency of bird evolution on oceanic islands with few predators and abundant food: accretion of thermodynamic efficiency at the expense of flight abilities, reduced wing muscles, a diminished keel on the sternum, a generally robust physique.[2]

Kakapo are critically endangered; only 86 living individuals are known, all of which have been given names.[3] The ancestral Kakapo migrated to the islands of New Zealand in prehistory; in the absence of mammalian predators, it lost the ability to fly. Because of Polynesian and European colonisation and the introduction of predators such as cats, rats, and stoats, most of the Kakapo were wiped out. Conservation efforts began in the 1890s, but they were not very successful until the implementation of the Kakapo Recovery Plan in the 1980s. As of November 2005, surviving Kakapo are kept on four predator-free islands, Maud, Chalky (Te Kakahu), Codfish (Whenua Hou) and Anchor islands, where they are closely monitored.[2] Two large Fiordland islands, Resolution and Secretary, have been the subject of large-scale ecological restoration activities to prepare self-sustaining ecosystems with suitable habitat for the Kakapo.

The conservation of the Kakapo has made the species well known. Many books and documentaries detailing the plight of the Kakapo have been produced in recent years. One of the earliest television documentaries to feature the Kakapo was Two in the Bush, made by Gerald Durrell for the BBC in 1963. Two of the most significant documentaries, both made by NHNZ, are Kakapo - Night Parrot (1982) and To Save the Kakapo (1997). The BBC's Natural History Unit also featured the Kakapo, including a sequence with Sir David Attenborough in The Life of Birds. It was also one of the endangered animals that Douglas Adams and Mark Carwardine set out to find for the radio series and book Last Chance to See.

The Kakapo, like many other bird species, has historically been important to the Māori, the indigenous people of New Zealand, appearing in many of the traditional legends and folklore.

Description

Photo of a 1-year-old Kakapo on Codfish Island

Kakapo are large, rotund parrots; males measure up to 60 centimetres (24 in) and weigh between 2 and 4 kilograms (4.5–9 lb) at maturity.[4] Kakapo are unable to fly, having short wings for their size and lacking the pronounced keel bone (sternum) that anchors the flight muscles of other birds. They use their wings for balance, support, and to break their falls when leaping from trees. Unlike other land birds, Kakapo can accumulate large amounts of body fat to store energy making them the heaviest parrot.[2]

The upper parts of the Kakapo have yellowish moss-green feathers barred or mottled with black or dark brownish grey, blending well with native vegetation. Individuals may have strongly varying degrees of mottling and colour tone and intensity — museum specimens have shown that some birds had completely yellow colouring. The breast and flanks are yellowish-green streaked with yellow. Their bellies, undertail, necks and faces are predominantly yellowish, streaked with pale green and weakly mottled with brownish-grey. Because the feathers do not need the strength and stiffness required for flight, they are exceptionally soft, giving rise to the specific epithet habroptilus. Kakapo have a conspicuous facial disc of fine feathers, resembling the face of an owl; thus, early European settlers called it the "owl parrot". Their beaks are surrounded by delicate vibrissa or "whiskers", which they use to sense the ground for navigation as they walk with their heads lowered. The mandible is mostly ivory-colored, with part of the upper mandible being bluish-grey. The eyes are dark brown. Kakapo feet are large, scaly, and, as in all parrots, zygodactyl (two toes face forward and two backward). They have pronounced claws particularly useful for climbing. The ends of their tail feathers often become worn from being continually dragged on the ground.[2]

The "whiskers" around the beak

Females are easily distinguished from males due to some notable differences: they have a more narrow and less domed head, their beaks are narrower and proportionally longer, their ceres and nostrils smaller, their legs and feet more slender and pinkish grey, and their tails are proportionally longer. While their plumage color is not very different to that of males, the toning is more subtle, with less yellow and mottling. They tend to be more resistant and aggressive than males when handled. Nesting females are also distinguished by a brood-patch on the bare skin of the belly.[2]

Like many parrots, Kakapo have a variety of calls. In addition to the booms (see below for a recording) and chings of their mating calls, they often skraark to announce their location to other birds.

Kakapo have a well-developed sense of smell, which complements their nocturnal lifestyle.[5] They can discriminate among odours while foraging; a behaviour reported for only one other parrot species.[5] One of the most striking characteristics of Kakapo is their pleasant and powerful odour, which has been variously described as musty, honey-like, fruity or like air freshener[citation needed]. Given the Kakapo's well-developed sense of smell, this scent may be a social chemosignal. The smell often alerts predators to the largely defenseless Kakapo.

Classification

The Kakapo has so many unusual features that it was initially placed in its own family, Strigopidae. However, it is now recognised as a member of the parrot family, Psittacidae. Its distinctiveness is highlighted by its classification in its own genus, Strigops; and tribe, Strigopini, in the subfamily Psittacinae. Some maintain the Kakapo in a subfamily of its own, Strigopinae.[6]

Earlier ornithologists felt the Kakapo may be related to the Ground Parrot and Night Parrot of Australia; others pointed to the Nestorini tribe.[7] A 2005 sex chromosome spindlin DNA sequence study confirmed affinities with the genus Nestor, which contains the Kākā and the Kea. The molecular data further suggests that the two Nestor species, and the Kakapo in its own genus, comprise an ancient group that split off from all other Psittacidae before their radiation,[8] but fossil evidence seems to contradict this[citation needed]; given the violent geological history of New Zealand (see, for example, Taupo Volcanic Zone), other explanations such as episodes of genetic drift seem better supported by evidence.

Ecology and behaviour

 
Maximum distribution since 1840
 
Fossil evidence
Historic distribution of the Kakapo.

The only mammals native to New Zealand are three species of small bats (one extinct). It seems that the Kakapo — like many of New Zealand's bird species — has evolved to occupy an ecological niche normally filled by various species of mammal. Before the arrival of humans, Kakapo were largely distributed throughout the three main islands of New Zealand. They lived in a variety of habitats, including tussocklands, scrublands and coastal areas. They also inhabited forests, including those dominated by podocarps (rimu, matai, kahikatea, totara), beeches, tawa, and rata. They particularly favored forest margins and areas of regenerating forest for the wider variety of vegetation in a compact area. In Fiordland, areas of avalanche and slip debris with regenerating and heavily fruiting vegetation — such as five finger, wineberry, bush lawyer, tutu, hebes, and coprosmas — became known as "Kakapo gardens".

Kakapo are primarily nocturnal; they roost under cover in trees or on the ground during the day and rove their territories at night.[1] Though the Kakapo cannot fly, they are excellent climbers, ascending to the crowns of the tallest trees. They can also "parachute" from heights by spreading their wings, floating gently to the forest floor. Having lost the ability to fly, they have developed strong legs. Movement is often by way of rapid "jog-like" gait where it can take kilometers away.[4] Female make two return trips each night during nesting from her nest to the food source up to 1 km (0.5 miles) away[9] and males walk from their home ranges to the mating arena up to 5 km (3 miles) away during the mating season (October–January).[10]

Kakapo are a curious species and have been known to interact with humans. Conservation staff and volunteers have engaged extensively with some Kakapo, and they are known to have distinct personalities.

One behaviour that has not recently served the Kakapo well is their reaction to threats. When Kakapo feel threatened, they freeze, hoping to blend in with the vegetation that they resemble. This was a good strategy to foil their main native predator, the giant Haast's Eagle. However, it does not protect them from their new mammalian predators (feral cats and dogs), which rely on an excellent sense of smell. A typical way for humans to hunt down Kakapo is by releasing trained dogs.[11]

Diet

The beak of the Kakapo is specially adapted for grinding food finely. For this reason, Kakapo have very small gizzards compared to other birds of their size. They are generally herbivorous, eating native plants, seeds, fruits, pollens and even the sapwood of trees. A study in 1984 identified 25 plant species as Kakapo food.[1] They are particularly fond of the fruit of the rimu tree, and will feed on it exclusively during seasons when it is abundant. Kakapo have a distinctive habit of grabbing a leaf or frond with a foot and stripping the nutritious parts of the plant out with their beaks, leaving a ball of indigestible fiber. These little clumps of plant fibers are a distinctive sign of the presence of Kakapo.[12][13]

Kakapo diet changes seasonally. The plants eaten most frequently during the year include some species of Lycopodium ramulosum, Lycopodium fastigium, Schizaea fistulosa, Blechnum minus, Blechnum procerum, Cyathodes juniperina, Dracophyllum longifolium, Olearia colensoi and Thelymitra venosa. Individual plants of the same species are often treated differently. Kakapo leave conspicuous evidence of their feeding activities, from 10×10 m to 50×100 m feeding ground areas.[1] Manuka and yellow silver pine scrubs are obvious signs of their center of feeding activities.

Reproduction

Kakapo camouflaged by its feathers.

Kakapo are the only parrots in the world that have a lek breeding system.[14] Males loosely gather in an arena and compete with each other to attract females. Females watch the males display, or "lek".[15] They choose a mate based on the quality of his display; they are not pursued by the males in any overt way. No pair bond is formed; males and females meet only to mate.

During the courting season, males leave their home ranges for hilltops and ridges where they establish their own mating courts. These leks can be up to 7 kilometres (4 mi) from a Kakapo's usual territory and are an average of 50 metres (160 ft) apart within the lek arena. Males remain in the region of their court throughout the courting season. At the start of the breeding season, males will fight to try to secure the best courts. They confront each other with raised feathers, spread wings, open beaks, raised claws and loud screeching and growling. Fighting may leave birds with injuries.

Each court consists of bowl-like depressions dug in the ground by the male, up to 10 centimetres (4 in) deep and long enough to fit the half-metre length of the bird. Bowls are often created next to rock faces, banks, or tree trunks to help reflect sound.[14] Each male’s bowls are connected by a network of trails or tracks which may extend 50 metres (160 ft) along a ridge or 20 metres (60 ft) in diameter around a hilltop.[14] Males meticulously clear their bowls and tracks of debris. One way researchers check whether bowls are visited at night is to place a few twigs in the bowl; if the male visits overnight, he will pick them up in his beak and toss them away.

To attract females, males make loud, low-frequency (below 100 Hz) booming calls from their bowls by inflating a thoracic sac.[4][16] They start with low grunts, which increase in volume as the sac inflates. After a sequence of about 20 loud booms, the volume drops off. The male Kakapo then stands up for a short while before again lowering his head, inflating his chest and starting another sequence of booms. The booms can be heard at least one kilometre (0.6 mi) away on a still night; wind can carry the sound at least five kilometres (3 mi).[14] Males boom for an average of eight hours a night; each male may produce thousands of booms in this time. This may continue every night for three or four months during which time the male may lose half his body weight. Each male moves around the bowls in his court so that the booms are sent out in different directions.

Females are attracted by the booms of the competing males; they too may need to walk several kilometers from their territories to the arena. Once a female enters the court of one of the males, the male performs a display in which he rocks from side to side and makes clicking noises with his beak.[2] He turns his back to the female, spreads his wings in display and walks backwards towards her. The duration of attempted copulation is between 2 to 14 minutes.[2] Once the birds have mated, the female returns to her home territory to lay eggs and raise the chicks. The male continues booming in the hope of attracting another female.

Female Kakapo lay up to three eggs per breeding cycle.[16] They nest on the ground under the cover of plants or in cavities such as hollow tree trunks. They incubate the eggs faithfully, but are forced to leave them every night in search of food. Predators are known to eat the eggs and the embryos inside can also freeze to death in the mother's absence. Kakapo eggs usually hatch within 30 days,[17] bearing fluffy gray chicks that are quite helpless. After the eggs hatch, the female feeds the chicks for three months, and the chicks continue to remain with the female for some months after fledging.[16] The young chicks are just as vulnerable to predators as the eggs, and young have been killed by many of the same predators that attack adults. Chicks leave the nest at approximately 10 to 12 weeks of age. As they gain greater independence, their mothers may feed the chicks sporadically for up to 6 months.

Because Kakapo are quite long-lived, they tend to have an adolescence before beginning breeding. Males do not start to boom until about 5 years of age.[4] Females do not seek out males until they are between 9 and 11 years old.[17] This long delay before they start to reproduce leaves plenty of time to perpetuate the species. Kakapo do not breed every year and have one of the lowest rates of reproduction among birds. Breeding occurs only in years when trees mast (fruit heavily), providing a plentiful food supply. Rimu mast occurs only every three to five years, so in rimu-dominant forests such as those on Codfish Island, Kakapo breeding occurs as infrequently.[18]

Conservation

The population of Kakapo in New Zealand has been significantly reduced since human habitation of the country. Since 1891, conservation efforts have been attempted to prevent extinction. The most successful scheme has been the Kakapo Recovery Plan; this was implemented in 1989 and is still ongoing.

Human impact

The first factor in the decline of the Kakapo was the arrival of humans. According to Māori folklore, Kakapo were found throughout the country when the Polynesians first arrived in Aotearoa 1,000 years ago;[19] subfossil and midden deposits show that they were present throughout the North island, South island and Stewart island before and during early Māori times.[20] Māori settlers from Polynesia hunted the Kakapo for food and for their skins and feathers, which were made into luxurious capes.[19] They used the dried heads as ear ornaments. Due to its flightlessness, strong scent and habit of freezing when threatened, the Kakapo were easy prey for the Māori and their dogs. Their eggs and chicks were also predated by the Polynesian Rat or kiore, which the Māori brought to New Zealand.[15] Furthermore, the deliberate clearing of vegetation by Māori reduced the habitable range for Kakapo. Although the Kakapo were extinct in many parts of the islands by the time Europeans arrived,[21] they were still present in the central part of North island and forested parts of South island.[20]

From the 1840s, European settlers cleared vast tracts of land for farming and grazing, further jeopardising the Kakapo and their habitat. They brought more dogs and other mammalian predators, including domestic cats, black rats and stoats.[22] Europeans knew little of the Kakapo until George Gray of the British Museum described it from a skin in 1845. As the Māori had done, early European explorers and their dogs fed on Kakapo. In the late 1800s, Kakapo became well-known as a scientific curiosity, and thousands were captured or killed for zoos, museums and collectors. Most captured specimens died within months. From at least the 1870s, collectors knew the Kakapo population was declining; their prime concern was to collect as many as possible before they became extinct.

In the 1880s, large numbers of mustelids (stoats, ferrets and weasels) were released in New Zealand to reduce rabbit numbers,[23] but they also preyed heavily on many native species including the Kakapo. Other browsing animals, such as introduced deer, competed with Kakapo for food, and caused the extinction of some of its preferred plant species.

Early protection efforts

Thousands of Kakapo were collected for museums across the world.

In 1891, the New Zealand government set aside Resolution Island in Fiordland as a nature reserve; in 1894, the government appointed Richard Henry as caretaker. A keen naturalist, Henry was aware that native birds were declining, and began catching and moving Kakapo and kiwi from the mainland to the predator-free Resolution Island. In six years, he moved more than 200 Kakapo to Resolution Island. By 1900, however, stoats had swum to Resolution Island and colonised it; they wiped out this nascent Kakapo population within 6 years.[24]

In 1903, three Kakapo were moved from Resolution Island to the nature reserve of Hauturu/Little Barrier Island north-east of Auckland, but feral cats were present and the Kakapo were never seen again. In 1912, three Kakapo were moved to another reserve, Kapiti Island, north-west of Wellington. One of them survived until at least 1936, despite the presence of feral cats for part of the intervening period.[24]

By the 1920s, the Kakapo were extinct on the North Island and their range and numbers on the South Island were declining.[21] One of their last refuges was rugged Fiordland. There, during the 1930s, they were often seen or heard, and occasionally eaten, by hunters or roadworkers. By the 1940s, reports of Kakapo were becoming scarce.

1950–1989 conservation efforts

In the 1950s, the New Zealand Wildlife Service was established and began making regular expeditions to search for Kakapo, mostly in Fiordland and what is now the Kahurangi National Park in the northwest of the South Island. Seven Fiordland expeditions between 1951 and 1956 found only a few recent signs. Finally, in 1958 a Kakapo was caught and released in the Milford Sound catchment area in Fiordland. Six more Kakapo were captured in 1961; one was released and the other five were transferred to the aviaries of the Mount Bruce Bird Reserve near Masterton in the North Island. Within months, four of the birds had died and the fifth died after about four years. In the next 12 years, regular expeditions found few signs of Kakapo, indicating that numbers were continuing to decline. Only one bird was captured in 1967; it died the following year.

By the early 1970s, it was uncertain whether Kakapo was still an extant species. At the end of 1974, scientists located several more male Kakapo and made the first scientific observations of Kakapo booming. These observations led Don Merton to speculate for the first time that Kakapo had a lek breeding system.[15] From 1974 to 1976, 14 Kakapo were discovered but all appeared to be males. One male bird was captured in the Milford area in 1975, christened "Richard Henry", and transferred to Maud Island. This raised the possibility that all the females had died and that the species was functionally extinct. All the birds the Wildlife Service discovered from 1951 to 1976 were in U-shaped glaciated valleys flanked by almost-vertical cliffs and surrounded by high mountains. Such extreme terrain had slowed colonisation by browsing mammals, leaving islands of virtually unmodified native vegetation. However, even here, stoats were present and by 1976 Kakapo were gone from the valley floors and only a few males survived high on the most inaccessible parts of the cliffs.[2]

Prior to 1977, no expedition had been to Stewart Island/Rakiura, despite government workers seeing a Kakapo there and snatching feathers from it in 1949[citation needed]. In 1977, sightings of Kakapo were reported on Stewart Island.[2] An expedition to the island found a track and bowl system on its first day; soon after, it located several dozen Kakapo. The finding in an 8,000 ha area of fire-modified scrubland and forest raised hope that the population would include females. The total population was estimated at 100 to 200 birds.[25]

Mustelids have never colonised Steward Island/Rakiura, but feral cats were present. During a survey, it was apparent that cats killed Kakapo with a predation rate of 56% per annum.[26] At this rate, the birds could not survive on the island and therefore an intensive cat control was introduced in 1982, after which no cat-killed Kakapo were found.[2] However, to ensure the survival of the remaining birds, scientists decided later that this population should be transferred to predator-free islands; this operation was carried between 1982 and 1997.[27]

Kakapo recovery plan

Kakapo Translocations 1974–1992[27]
Translocated to Number of Kakapo Deaths < 6 months Survived as of Nov. 1992
Maud Island (1974–81) 9 (6♂, 3♀) 3 (2♂, 1♀) 4 (2♂, 2♀)
Little Barrier Island (1982) 22 (13♂, 9♀) 2 (1♂, 1♀) 15–19 (10–12♂, 5–7♀)
Codfish Island (1987–92) 30 (20♂, 10♀) 0 20–30 (13–20♂, 7–10♀)
Maud Island (1989–91) 6 (4♂, 2♀) 0 5 (3♂, 2♀)
Mana Island (1992) 2 (2♀) 1 (1♀) 1 (1♀)
Total 65 (43♂, 22♀) 6 (4♂, 2♀) 41–55 (27–36♂, 14–19♀)

Note: ♂ = males, ♀ = females.

In 1989, a Kakapo Recovery Plan was developed and a Kakapo Recovery Group established to implement it.[28] The New Zealand's Department of Conservation replaced the Wildlife Service for this task. The first action of the plan was to relocate all the remaining Kakapo to suitable islands for them to breed. None of the New Zealand islands were ideal to establish Kakapo without rehabilitation by extensive revegetation and the eradication of introduced mammalian predators and competitors. Four islands were finally chosen: Maud, Hauturu/Little Barrier, Codfish and Mana.[27] Some islands had to be rehabilitated several times when feral cats, stoats and weka kept appearing. Sixty-five Kakapo (43 males, 22 females) have been successfully transferred onto the four islands in five translocations.[27] As of November 2005, Hauturu/Little Barrier Island and Mana Island were replaced with Chalky Island (Te Kakahu) and Anchor Island as Kakapo sanctuaries.[2]

Following the implementation of the Kakapo Recovery Plan, Kakapo numbers have generally increased.

A key part of the Recovery Plan is the supplementary feeding of females. Kakapo breed only once every two to five years, when a certain type of plant species, primarily Dacrydium cupressinum (rimu), produces protein-rich fruit and seeds. Observations of the relationship between intermittent breeding and the plant's mast year help biologists choose which suitable supplementary foods to increase Kakapo breeding frequency.[29] In 1989, six preferred foods (apples, sweet potatoes, almonds, brazil nuts, sunflower seeds and walnuts) were supplied ad libitum each night to 12 feeding stations. Males and females ate the supplied foods, and females nested on Little Barrier Island in the summers of 1989–91 for the first time since 1982, although nesting success was low.[30]

Supplementary feeding not only increases the Kakapo breeding frequency, but also affects the sex ratio of Kakapo offspring.[31] Females fed protein-rich foods produce more male-biased offspring (males have 30–40% more body weight than females). Females produce bias offsprings towards the dispersive sex when competition for resources (such as food) is high and to the non-dispersive sex when food is plentiful; a female Kakapo will likely be able to produce eggs, even when there are few resources, while a male Kakapo will be more capable of perpetuating the species when there are plenty, by mating with several females. This finding was subsequently used to increase the number of female chicks by deliberately manipulating maternal condition.[32] During the winter of 1981, only females below 1.5 kg weight were given supplementary feeding to avoid raising their body condition, and the sex ratio results in 1982 were close to parity, eliminating the male-biased sex ratios in the unrestricted feeding.

Though breeding can be improved by supplementary feeding, the survival of young Kakapo is hampered by the presence of Polynesian rats. Of 21 chicks that hatched between 1981 and 1994, nine were either killed by rats or died and were subsequently eaten by rats.[29] Nest protection has been intensified since 1995 by using traps and poison stations as soon as a nest had been detected. A small video camera and infra-red light source watch the nest continuously, which will remotely scare approaching rats by small bang and flash lights. To increase the success rate of nesting, a nest watcher places a small thermostatically controlled electric blanket over the eggs or chicks, whenever the female leaves the nest for food. The survival rate of chicks has increased from 29% in unprotected nests to 75% in protected ones.[29]

To monitor the Kakapo population continuously, each bird is equipped with a radio transmitter.[29] Every known Kakapo has been given a name by Kakapo Recovery Programme officials. It is an affectionate way for conservation staff to refer to individual birds, and a stark reminder of how few remain. Artificial incubation of eggs and hand-raising of chicks interventions were often used to strengthen conditions of the eggs and the chicks.[33] As of November 2005, the population comprised 41 females and 45 males, including four fledging (3 females and 1 male) bred in 2005.[2] The oldest surviving Kakapo, "Richard Henry", is thought to be between 35 and 50 years old.[34]

The Kakapo Recovery Plan has been a successful program as the numbers of Kakapo increase steadily. The adult survival rate and their productivity have both improved significantly since the programme's inception. However, the main goal is to establish at least one viable, self-sustaining, unmanaged population of Kakapo as a functional component of the ecosystem in a protected habitat.[35] To accept this conservation challenge, two large Fiordland islands, Resolution (20,860 ha) and Secretary (8,140 ha), have been prepared for re-introduction of Kakapo with large-scale ecological restoration activities.[2]

In Māori culture

The Kakapo has a rich tradition of Māori folklore and beliefs associated with it as a species. Their irregular breeding cycle was noted to be associated with heavy fruiting or "masting" events of particular plant species such as the Rimu which led the Māori to credit the bird with the ability to foretell the future.[36] Used to substantiate this claim were reported observations of these birds dropping the berries of the Hinau and Tawa trees (when they were in season) into secluded pools of water to preserve them as a food supply for the summer ahead; the Māori practice of immersing food in water for the same purpose is believed to originate from these observations.[36]

Use for food and clothing

As the meat of Kakapo was considered to be good eating, they were once hunted for this purpose during the time they were still widespread.[37] One source states that its flesh "resembles lamb in taste and texture",[36] although European settlers have described the bird as having a "strong and slightly stringent flavor".[38] In breeding years, the loud booming calls of the males at their mating arenas made it easy for Māori hunting parties to track them down, and they were also hunted while feeding or when having dust baths in dry weather. The birds were caught, generally at night, using snares, pitfall traps, or by groups of domesticated Polynesian dogs which accompanied the hunting parties — sometimes they would use fire sticks of various sorts to dazzle the birds in the darkness, stopping them in their tracks and making the capture easier.[36] Cooking was either done in a Hāngi or in gourds of boiling oil.[37] The flesh of the birds could be preserved in their own fat and stored in containers for later consumption — hunters of the Ngāi Tahu tribe would pack the flesh in baskets made from the inner bark of Totara tree or in containers constructed from kelp.[39] Bundles of Kakapo tail feathers were attached to the sides of these containers to provide decoration and a way to identify their contents.[38][39] Also taken by the Māori were the bird's eggs, which are described as "white-ish but not pure white", and about the same size as a kererū egg.[36]

As well as eating the meat of the Kakapo they killed, Māori would use Kakapo skins — with the feathers still attached — to create cloaks and capes.[37][39] Each one required up to 11,000 feathers to make.[40] Not only were these garments very beautiful, they also kept the wearer very warm.[40][37] They were highly valued, and the few still in existence today are considered Taonga (treasures) — indeed, the old Māori adage "You have a Kākāpō cape and you still complain of the cold" is used to describe someone who is never satisfied.[37] Kakapo feathers were also used to decorate the heads of taiaha, but were removed before actual use in combat.[38][39][41]

Despite all, the Kakapo was also regarded as an affectionate pet by the Māori. This was corroborated by European settlers in New Zealand in the 19th century, among them George Edward Grey, who once wrote in a letter to an associate that his pet Kakapo's behavior towards him and his friends was "more like that of a dog than a bird".[36]

Media

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References

  1. ^ a b c d H.A. Best (1984). "The Foods of Kakapo on Stewart Island as Determined from Their Feeding Sign" (PDF). New Zealand Journal of Ecology. 7: 71–83.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Ralph G. Powlesland, Don V. Merton, and John F. Cockrem. "A parrot apart: the natural history of the kakapo (Strigops habroptilus), and the context of its conservation management" (PDF). Notornis. 53 (1): 3–26. Retrieved 2007-02-06.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ "KAKAPO PARROTS - The 86 Names". anotherchancetosee.com. 2006-08-04. Retrieved 2007-02-06. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); External link in |publisher= (help)
  4. ^ a b c d Higgins, P.J. (1999). Handbook of Australian, New Zealand and Antarctic Birds. Volume 4: Parrots to Dollarbird. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-553071-3.
  5. ^ a b Hagelin, Julie C. (2004). Observations on the olfactory ability of the Kakapo Strigops habroptilus, the critically endangered parrot of New Zealand. IBIS 146: 161–164
  6. ^ Turbott, E.G. (1990) Checklist of the birds of New Zealand and the Ross Dependency, Antarctica. Random Century, in association with the Ornithological Society of New Zealand, Auckland.
  7. ^ Smith, G.A. (1975) Systematics of parrots. Ibis 117: 18–66.
  8. ^ de Kloet, R.S.; de Kloet, S.R. (2005). The evolution of the spindlin gene in birds: sequence analysis of an intron of the spindlin W and Z gene reveals four major divisions of the Psittaciformes. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 36: 706–721.
  9. ^ R.G. Powlesland; B.D. Lloyd; H.A. Best; D.V. Merton (1992). "Breeding Biology of the Kakapo Strigops-Habroptilus on Stewart Island, New Zealand". IBIS. 134 (4): 361–373.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ H.A. Best and R.G. Powlesland (1985). Kakapo. Dunedin: John McIndoe and New Zealand Wildlife Service.
  11. ^ R. Henry (1903). The habits of flightless birds of New Zealand: with notes on other flightless New Zealand birds. Wellington: Government Printer.
  12. ^ Gray, R.S. (1977). "The kakapo (Strigops habroptilus, Gray 1847), its food, feeding and habitat in Fiordland and Maud Island". M.Sc. thesis. Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  13. ^ Atkinson, I. A. E. and Merton, D. V. (2006). "Habitat and diet of kakapo (Strigops habroptilus) in the Esperance Valley, Fiordland, New Zealand" (PDF). Notornis. 53 (1): 37–54.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ a b c d Merton, D.V.; Morris, R.D.; Atkinson, I.A.E. (1984). "Lek behaviour in a parrot: the Kakapo Strigops habroptilus of New Zealand". Ibis. 126: 277–283.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ a b c Merton, D.V. (1976). Conservation of the kakapo: a progress report. In Proc. Science in Nat. Parks. . National Parks Authority, Wellington, N.Z. National Parks Series No. 6: 139–148.
  16. ^ a b c J.F. Cockrem (2002). "Reproductive biology and conservation of the endangered kakapo (Strigops habroptilus) in New Zealand". Avian and Poultry Biology Reviews. 13 (3): 139–144.
  17. ^ a b Daryl K. Eason, Graeme P. Elliott, Don V. Merton, Paul W. Jansen, Grant A. Harper, and Ron J. Moorhouse (2006). "Breeding biology of kakapo (Strigops habroptilus) on offshore island sanctuaries, 1990–2002" (PDF). Notornis. 54 (1): 27–36.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  18. ^ Yvette Cottam, Don V. Merton, and Wouter Hendriks (2006). "Nutrient composition of the diet of parent-raised kakapo nestlings" (PDF). Notornis. 53 (1): 90–99.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  19. ^ a b Rob Tipa (2006). "Kakapo in Māori lore" (PDF). Notornis. 53 (1). Retrieved 2007-02-06.
  20. ^ a b Barrie Heather and Hugh Robertson, illustrated bu Derek Onley, The Field guide to the birds of New Zealand, Viking, revised edition, 2005
  21. ^ a b G. R. Williams (1956). "The Kakapo (Strigops habroptilus, Gray): a review and reappraisal of a near-extinct species". Notornis. 7 (2): 29–56.
  22. ^ W. J. Sutherland. "Conservation Biology: Science, Sex and the Kakapo". Nature. 419: 265–266.
  23. ^ Murphy, E and Dowding, J. (1995). "Ecology of the stoat in Nothofagus forest: home range, habitat use and diet at different stages of the beech mast cycle" (PDF). New Zealand Journal of Ecology. 19 (2): 97–109.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  24. ^ a b Hill, S.; Hill, J. 1987. Richard Henry of Resolution Island. Dunedin, John McIndoe.
  25. ^ Powlesland, R.G.; Roberts, A.; Lloyd, B. D. and Merton, D.V. (1995). "Number, fate and distribution of kakapo (Strigops habroptilus) found on Stewart Island, New Zealand, 1979–92" (PDF). New Zealand Journal of Zoology. 22: 239–248.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  26. ^ Karl, B.J. and Best, H.A. (1982). "Feral cats on Stewart Island: their foods and their effects on kakapo". New Zealand Journal of Zoology. 9: 287–294.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ a b c d B. D. Lloyd and R. G. Powlesland (1994). "The decline of kakapo Strigops habroptilus and attempts at conservation by translocation". Biological Conservation. 69 (1): 75–85.
  28. ^ Powlesland, R.G. (1989). Kakapo recovery plan 1989–1994. Wellington: Department of Conservation.
  29. ^ a b c d Elliott, G.P.; Merton, D.V.; Jansen, P.W. (2001). "Intensive management of a critically endangered species: the kakapo". Biological Conservation. 99 (1): 121–133.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  30. ^ R. G. Powlesland and B. D. Lloyd (1994). "Use of supplementary feeding to induce breeding in free-living kakapo Strigops habroptilus in New Zealand". Biological Conservation. 69 (1): 97–106.
  31. ^ Clout, M.N.; Elliott, G.P.; Robertson, B.C. (2002). "Effects of supplementary feeding on the offspring sex ratio of kakapo: a dilemma for the conservation of a polygynous parrot". Biological Conservation. 107 (1): 13–18.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  32. ^ Robertson, B.C.; Elliott, G.P.; Eason, D.K.; Clout, M.N.; Gemmell, N.J. (2006). "Sex allocation theory aids conservation". Biology Letters. 2 (2): 229–231.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  33. ^ Daryl K. Eason and Ron J. Moorhouse. "Hand-rearing kakapo (Strigops habroptilus), 1997–2005" (PDF). Notornis. 53 (1): 116–125.
  34. ^ Kakapo Recovery Programme:Richard Henry
  35. ^ Cresswell, M. (1996). Kakapo recovery plan 1996–2005. Threatened Species Recovery Plan No. 21. Wellington: Department of Conservation.
  36. ^ a b c d e f Murdoch Riley, "Maori Bird Lore; An introduction", Viking Sevenseas NZ LTD., 2001
  37. ^ a b c d e Rod Morris, Hal Smith,"Wild South: Saving New Zealands endangered birds", Random House New Zealand, 1995
  38. ^ a b c http://www.notornis.org.nz/new_issues/Notornis_53-2006/Notornis_53_1_191.pdf retrieved on the 19th of February 2007
  39. ^ a b c d http://www.kakaporecovery.org.nz/then/iwi.html accessed on the 13th of February 2007 Cite error: The named reference "KM" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  40. ^ a b Andrew Crowe, "Which New Zealand Bird?", Penguin, 2001
  41. ^ Cite error: The named reference WNZB was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

Further reading

  • Butler, David (1989). Quest for the kakapo. Auckland: Heinemann Reed. ISBN 0-7900-0065-2.
  • Climo, Gideon and Ballance, Alison (1997). Hoki: the story of a kakapo. Auckland: Godwit. ISBN 1-86962-009-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Jones, Jenny (2003). The Kakapo. Auckland: Reed. ISBN 1-86948-662-5.
  • Template:IUCN2006 (Database entry includes justification for why this species is critically endangered.)

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