Sunday 27 December 2015

On Kapiti Island 4 - New Zealand's premier conservation island - ground grazing


Welcome to the Midnight Collective Broadsheet 104
Actively supporting NZ’s endangered wetland birds
Keruru -grassed, on Kapiti Island
One of the more intriguing aspects of a visit to the predator free island of Kapiti is the sight of native birds grazing on the ground in the open grassland areas. This includes not only the more familiar native birds you’ll spot on the Mainland, including keruru (native pigeon) and tui... 
Tui -on path below Red House 
but also the rarer korimako/bellbird... 
Spot the korimako
and the kakariki. This red crowned native parrot has now virtually disappeared from the North Island, as has the yellow crowned kakariki from the South.
Kakariki grazing on Kapiti Island 
Kakariki are very vulnerable to rats, because they nest close to the ground; though even in the 1970’s you could still see the odd pair in Wellington. They have now been reintroduced in the city, thanks to Zealandia, the predator controlled reserve in Karori; though it is unlikely they will spread far into the unprotected areas. Blame for the demise of these native parrots is usually placed upon introduced mammalian pests, like rats, stoats, possum and ferrets but gun-happy, forest razing humans must shoulder the prime responsibilty.

Paekakariki, just south of here is translated from the Maori as many kakariki, a fact Charlotte Godley described in her letters home to England in the early 1850’s. She was riding in a horse and cart, north along the coast and noted how these indigenous parrots gave New Zealand so much of its exotic flare. Then in the next sentence she detailed how her husband was sitting at the back of the cart with their four year old son, teaching him how to shoot them.    
Kakariki pair - female in foreground
There must be rich food pickings in these grassy areas for the birds all looked in very good condition;   keruru in particular being the plumpest in the country. They are also very visitor friendly.  We took a party of visitors over to the island a few years ago in dampish weather. One lifted off a nearby bush but found it difficult to get airborne. She sailed over the top of the tour leader (from behind) then got some extra lift by pushing off from the top of his (hatted) head.     
Roosting out of the rain...birds dislike inclement weather just as much as we do.
Track we were listening to while posting this. Well its a dreamy post-Christmas now, and one of the sunniest Xmas spells for many a year - so we're going with -The Lovin Spoonful -What a day for a daydream
I been havin' a sweet dream
I been dreamin' since I woke up today
It's starring me and my sweet dream
Cause she's the one makes me feel this way


Tuesday 15 December 2015

On Kapiti Island 3 -New Zealand's premier conservation reserve


Welcome to the Midnight Collective Broadsheet 103
Actively supporting NZ’s endangered wetland birds
Before we go up into the Kapiti forest to encounter more of our critically endangered birds, we are taking a short trip down to the stony beach shoreline, where a Blackback gull colony is right in the centre of its nesting cycle and unusual events were taking place.

The Blackback is not endangered and there are larger nearby colonies. One on pest free Matiu/Somes Island in the centre of Wellington Harbour (Te Whanganui o Tara) has proved a hazard to the local airport and steps have been taken to keep the size of the colony down (by slipping infertile eggs into the nests). Yet this Island colony is well established and its community dynamic proved intriguing.

Here upwards of a dozen nesting birds are spread along around a kilometre of coast, the females happily ensconced amongst the flotsam, well above the high tide mark. They make little effort to conceal their nests, though they will freeze if you venture too close, and only leave at the very last moment. 

All their defensive effort goes into mounting an aggressive aerial guard. Much of the colony flies over to the mainland beaches during the day to feed, (they flock back right on dusk), but there are always watchful birds left with the nesting females who will attack any human who ventures too close. A principal egg predator however, is the (protected) weka, and they hang around the colony; but a Blackback is more than a match for this endemic rail, and even at night the gulls can spot an intruder and will take to the air in defence.
Weka - near extinction in North Island  -foto Ridgway Lythgoe
Right in the centre of this colony however, was a nesting intruder – a lone variable oystercatcher -torea-pango. These birds are much more at risk than the Blackback’s and under siege from introduced pests where nesting on Mainland beaches. (From stoats, rats, dogs, feral cats et al; plus a self-introduced new comer, the spurwinged plover). But this presence provided a real intrigue because why would the blackback’s allow it?
Kapiti Island oystercatcher - gender unknown 
The oystercatcher pairs share the nesting, though there is only one at the nest at a time. We were on the island 5 days and saw the birds together just the once - at dusk - as they switched sitting responsibilities. They are somewhat like pied stilts in this. Assiduous at camouflage, they will spot you well before you spot them, and immediately leave the nest and begin very successful diversionary behaviours, fossicking innocently about, well away from the actual nest site, in order to lead you astray. So good were these two, that it took us forty eight hours before we finally developed the expertise to spot the sitting oystercatcher before she/he spotted us and thereby identify the nest – right out in the open.
I've got my eye on you
Oystercatcher nest
Blackback nest
Their nests are very similar to a blackback nest, and the eggs too are similar though lighter in colour; though you might easily mistake one for the other. But oystercatchers are both canny and feisty. They don’t confront a human, gauging them too large a threat so respond by diverting them. Smaller threats, as you will see in the video they implacably confront.


There is a lone male paradise duck –putangitangi- on the island. He has just lost his long time mate and is  a lost soul without her, perching on a picnic table through the night (which had to be cleaned every morning) before ambling down for company to the gull nesting colony during the day. The gulls were watchful but tolerant of his presence, but the oystercatcher wouldn’t have a bar of him – immediately denying him passageway and constantly swooping at him, and forcing him to fly passed to a roost at the far end of the colony.

So what exactly is going on here. Gulls are scavengers and could easily (a pukeko wouldn’t hesitate!) predate the eggs of the oystercatcher, but showed no interest in doing so. The oystercatcher, likewise could have had a feed out of the many gulls eggs it was surrounded by. And while it launched itself at the gloomy para, it showed no similar aggression to the gulls. 

They obviously know and are used to each. Presumably the gulls benefit from having this feisty cohabitant in residence, while the oystercatcher is in a much safer environment nested within this colony. Yet this is only half the story for these animals are actually building complex relationships. Most of the wildlife programmes you’ll see on TV and elsewhere focus on  predatory behaviours of wild animals. This is what attracts human interest (and lifts ratings) but it provides a very fallacious picture of the real lives of animals. Here on Kapiti, in an environment protected from human intervention and from introduced predators,  we are witnessing interspecies behaviours which both surprise and intrigue; for what is going on in these animals minds? Is it really that different to what goes on in ours? 

The benefit seems mutual and bares some similarity to the Raumati Beach dunelake environment when paradise duck were raising their young. (This wetland has now been destroyed by an expressway). The parents, particularly the females provide early warning signs of danger,  which benefitted (by alarming them) all the birds on the lake. They were also big enough  to confront the chief predator of the youngsters reared at the lake –pukeko. They  kept them at a wary distance.  

Track we were listening to while posting this - Mitchell Torok from 1953 - Caribbean...


Up in a tree so high away up in the sky
Sits a wide-eyed monkey on a limb.
He wonders why the people go to so much trouble
Just to try and be like him.
He doesn't understand that it's a ladys hand, 
That makes a heart feel so sublime.
But before too long he starts to sing their song, 
And then he gets in the conga line.

     
Jill Studd's Blog
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Saturday 5 December 2015

Kapiti Island sojourn 2 -The Takahe


Welcome to the Midnight Collective Broadsheet 102
Actively supporting NZ’s endangered wetland birds

The Takahe is a flightless rail, one of our rarest birds and very endearing. They are a big lumbering animal (amongst our NZ native birds) and, having lived apart from mammals like most of our rarest birds, they appear tame and approachable. This led to their dramatic decline especially after the arrival of Europeans and they were thought to be extinct, until rediscovered in South Island alpine  tussocklands in 1948.  Even after their rediscovery however they were poorly managed until the 1980’s when they began to be placed in pest controlled areas like Kapiti Island. There are now around 260 birds. This is an increase of around 60 in 15 years so this is a long term rehabilitation programme with a viable population thought to be around 500 birds.

Ideal takahe country is open grasslands. And this is the reason they are doing well on Mana Island just south of here, where a couple of years ago we encounted 11 youngsters. (Four were recently shot in a pukeko culling fiasco involving duckshooting volunteers on Motutapu Island in the Hauraki Gulf). But Kapiti is a reforested island and not ideal takahe country, so a minimum number are kept here. These are  three older birds, that live on the flats around this DoC station. 

It is still hoped they will breed so they are fed a couple of times a week to keep them in breeding condition through the spring.  We only spotted one over the first few days; hanging around the Red House and cawing for a feed, and this raised our nesting hopes, but then all three came out one evening, so it’s a little up in the air as to whether they’ll produce youngsters this year. It’s still early in the season however so let's keep our fingers crossed.  

We have put together a video clip of these birds coming out into the open. It gives a good idea of how these birds move and then their distinctive harsh cawing. Both kiwi and weka can match this grating sound though you’ll only hear kiwi at night and though you'll see weka through the day they are vocal mostly around dusk and dawn. We were especially fortunate however in capturing one takahe on the run and here you can see a rollicking movement that traces them right back to their dinosaur ancestors.
 
Track we were listening to while posting this we are still knee deep in birdland with Charlie Parker at Carnegie Hall...