Dubai Telegraph - New Zealand fights to save its flightless national bird

EUR -
AED 4.304583
AFN 77.35264
ALL 96.52995
AMD 447.121148
ANG 2.098382
AOA 1074.739085
ARS 1700.295745
AUD 1.77205
AWG 2.10963
AZN 1.951986
BAM 1.956813
BBD 2.361973
BDT 143.417272
BGN 1.954795
BHD 0.441802
BIF 3475.028836
BMD 1.172016
BND 1.514083
BOB 8.103504
BRL 6.462507
BSD 1.172732
BTN 105.807008
BWP 15.497482
BYN 3.440754
BYR 22971.522831
BZD 2.358611
CAD 1.614254
CDF 2653.44578
CHF 0.931281
CLF 0.027228
CLP 1068.140949
CNY 8.252461
CNH 8.242282
COP 4528.331759
CRC 584.314823
CUC 1.172016
CUP 31.058436
CVE 110.696669
CZK 24.355711
DJF 208.290901
DKK 7.471312
DOP 73.309109
DZD 151.712908
EGP 55.702434
ERN 17.580247
ETB 182.38528
FJD 2.677178
FKP 0.875346
GBP 0.876188
GEL 3.15861
GGP 0.875346
GHS 13.507516
GIP 0.875346
GMD 86.143623
GNF 10178.962996
GTQ 8.981839
GYD 245.356383
HKD 9.118968
HNL 30.888642
HRK 7.536415
HTG 153.592754
HUF 387.489159
IDR 19580.87918
ILS 3.760772
IMP 0.875346
INR 105.745596
IQD 1536.227704
IRR 49371.193797
ISK 147.966909
JEP 0.875346
JMD 187.641099
JOD 0.830939
JPY 182.426123
KES 151.069751
KGS 102.493298
KHR 4696.430212
KMF 491.074698
KPW 1054.807791
KRW 1730.382704
KWD 0.359704
KYD 0.977206
KZT 605.05309
LAK 25396.116553
LBP 105017.674577
LKR 362.837754
LRD 207.575382
LSL 19.662894
LTL 3.46066
LVL 0.708941
LYD 6.356425
MAD 10.748591
MDL 19.777234
MGA 5273.93154
MKD 61.55534
MMK 2461.301448
MNT 4157.848963
MOP 9.399425
MRU 46.814223
MUR 53.959537
MVR 18.107747
MWK 2033.530348
MXN 21.091122
MYR 4.788907
MZN 74.895718
NAD 19.662894
NGN 1707.24072
NIO 43.153251
NOK 11.909442
NPR 169.287599
NZD 2.030044
OMR 0.450677
PAB 1.172752
PEN 3.948527
PGK 5.054723
PHP 68.664935
PKR 328.58543
PLN 4.202312
PYG 7829.218306
QAR 4.276604
RON 5.090894
RSD 117.39265
RUB 93.692725
RWF 1707.383502
SAR 4.396062
SBD 9.528747
SCR 15.94784
SDG 704.967835
SEK 10.887916
SGD 1.51196
SHP 0.879316
SLE 28.247832
SLL 24576.603683
SOS 669.046204
SRD 45.331256
STD 24258.374657
STN 24.513207
SVC 10.261529
SYP 12960.586339
SZL 19.668177
THB 36.789934
TJS 10.83012
TMT 4.102058
TND 3.427774
TOP 2.821935
TRY 50.083775
TTD 7.957321
TWD 36.977472
TZS 2918.321285
UAH 49.532187
UGX 4189.257131
USD 1.172016
UYU 45.95476
UZS 14142.619905
VES 323.747516
VND 30853.333598
VUV 142.251043
WST 3.263731
XAF 656.296607
XAG 0.017923
XAU 0.00027
XCD 3.167433
XCG 2.113494
XDR 0.814481
XOF 656.310614
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.349871
ZAR 19.62688
ZMK 10549.554705
ZMW 26.67983
ZWL 377.388825
  • RIO

    0.4400

    77.63

    +0.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.29

    +0.13%

  • NGG

    -0.7700

    76.39

    -1.01%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    57.04

    -0.23%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.43

    0%

  • GSK

    -0.4200

    48.29

    -0.87%

  • BCC

    1.4100

    77.7

    +1.81%

  • RBGPF

    -1.7900

    80.22

    -2.23%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.28

    0%

  • AZN

    0.7500

    90.61

    +0.83%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    12.8

    -0.08%

  • RYCEF

    0.6300

    15.4

    +4.09%

  • BCE

    -0.3000

    22.85

    -1.31%

  • BP

    -1.1600

    33.31

    -3.48%

  • RELX

    0.0900

    40.65

    +0.22%

New Zealand fights to save its flightless national bird
New Zealand fights to save its flightless national bird / Photo: Marty MELVILLE - AFP

New Zealand fights to save its flightless national bird

New Zealand's treasured kiwi birds are shuffling around Wellington's verdant hills for the first time in a century, after a drive to eliminate invasive predators from the capital's surrounds.

Text size:

Visitors to New Zealand a millennium ago would have encountered a bona fide "birdtopia" -- islands teeming with feathered creatures fluttering through life unaware that mammalian predators existed.

The arrival of Polynesian voyagers in the 1200s and Europeans a few hundred years later changed all that.

Rats picked off snipe-rails and petrels, mice chewed through all the seeds and berries they could find, leaving little for native birds to peck on.

Possums -- introduced for fur -- stripped trees bare. Rabbits bred like, well, rabbits, devouring meadows and paddocks alike.

Heaping disaster upon disaster, stoats were introduced to kill the rabbits but instead killed wrens, thrushes, owls and quails.

The population of native flightless birds like the kakapo and kiwi plummeted.

The Department of Conservation estimates there are only around 70,000 wild kiwi left in New Zealand.

Despite the bird being a beloved national symbol, few New Zealanders have seen one in the wild.

However, numbers are rising again thanks to more than 90 community initiatives working nationwide to protect them.

One such group is The Capital Kiwi Project, a charitable trust backed by millions of dollars from government grants and private donations.

- Special connection -

"Ever since people came to New Zealand, we have had a special connection to the kiwi," founder and project leader Paul Ward told AFP.

"They are central to Maori myth. Our sports teams, our rugby league teams, our defence force and, even when we go overseas, we are known as kiwis.

"They are tough, resilient, adaptable, all values we think of as New Zealanders, but most of us have never seen a kiwi before."

Ward estimates wild kiwi last roamed the Wellington area more than a century ago.

The bid to save them required a sustained conservation effort.

The project had to first deal with the kiwi's natural enemies prowling through the undergrowth.

Local dog owners were invited to sessions to teach their pets to steer clear of kiwi while out for walks.

The project also had to declare war on stoats.

An adult kiwi can fight off a stoat using its powerful legs and sharp claws but a chick has no chance, Ward explained.

The project laid a huge network of 4,500 traps over an area equivalent to nearly 43,000 football pitches on the hills surrounding Wellington. The traps have claimed 1,000 stoats so far.

After "blitzing stoats", as Ward puts it, the predator population was low enough for the project to release the first batch of kiwi last November.

The birds were carefully transported nearly 500 kilometres (310 miles) from a captive breeding programme to a Wellington school, where they were welcomed by a traditional Maori ceremony.

Ward said a hush came over the 400-strong crowd as they caught their first glimpse of a kiwi when the first bird was released.

- Rare sightings -

"The power of that moment was palpable," he said. "Our job is to bottle that and spread it across the hills of Wellington."

Regular check-ups show that the first wave is thriving.

"Two months after we released the birds, we were ecstatic to discover they had gained weight," Ward said.

"One had put on 400 grams -- that's a considerable weight gain even for a human over Christmas or Easter. There's plenty of food for them on these hillsides."

Ward said the goal is to release 250 birds over the next five years to establish a large wild kiwi population.

He wants their distinctive shrill cry to become part of everyday life on the outskirts of the capital.

"It's our duty to look after the animal that's gifted us its name," Ward said.

"As one of our volunteers said, 'if we can't look after the thing we're named after we deserve to be renamed idiots'."

I.Mansoor--DT