Tuesday 31 October 2017

Nesting pied shags on Kapiti Coast New Zealand


Welcome to the Midnight Collective Broadsheet 148
Actively supporting NZ’s endangered wetland birds

Mum settles down...
Today a quick note, plus video on a pied shag colony 30 km north of here established in the macrocarpa at Waikawa Beach. This beach is famous as the bolt hole of provocative early Labour Minister of Public Works ‘Red’ Bob Semple, so first things first –
 Bob Semple in Nov 1911  an early Labour rally in Auckland  
For those not currently up with the state of political play in New Zealand and who have been patiently ‘watching this space’  as advised, we do have a new Labour-led coalition Government which includes the Greens.
 96 years later and here she goes - Jacinda Ardern PM
It is very early days but a first big test is on the horizon with the Climate Change conference about to get underway in Bonn Germany. PM Jacinda Ardern and James Shaw – leader of the Greens have both attended in the past and Fiji is providing leadership, so we are expecting major support for ‘at risk’ Pacific nations to emerge from this new Government, which early declared its serious concern about the Planet's slide into global warming.    Now back to the shags…

Growing chick with parent regurgitating
This pied shag colony along the Waikawa stream is only three or four years old, but growing steadily and we were lucky to be able to catch some film of the nests of  parents with their young. We had to film from a distance, then through tangled branches so apologise in advance for the quality – but here are youngsters being fed and parents swapping over nest sitting duties. 

There are at least two chicks in each nest, one of which is rather larger than the others and busy copping the lions share of the regurgitated food.
Pied shags, our largest shag, are coastal birds that feed in the sea and estuary. They had a bounty on their head in the 1940’s when their numbers plummeted. There is still surprisingly little information about how they are faring nationwide with population estimates varying between 1000 and 5000, though they are thought to be in decline. They appear stable on this coast however and our marine reserve must be a big help in growing this local population.  The major threat is from continued shooting, the deliberate destruction of nesting sites and net fishing.  The experience of two locals shows why. 
Pied shag in Waikawa stream
They were visiting the colony and found a bird enmeshed in a net set right below it. They jumped into the creek to free the bird but found it so thoroughly entangled they had to send home for a knife in order to cut it free. The bird fortunately, was no worse for her ordeal but not at all thankful for its rescuers. It bit the finger of one, causing blood to flow and when released dived down and bit his toe. First aid had to be rendered to the rescuers and the safest way to hold it (to protect themselves) was by the scruff of the neck. On this evidence the future of this bird looks assured!
  

Midnight Collective Conservation Order of the Month goes to those two who cut up the net then advised the authorities. 

Track we were listening to while posting this was Fats Domino's Blueberry Hill, 89 years old when he passed away last Thursday (our time). If you are a Treme fan you would have seen him as a highlight of  Series 3, at his house, post-Katrina, playing the piano, looking all sorts of worn, but still with those magic New Orleans fingers playing over the keys. 


The wind in the willow played
Love's sweet melody
But all of those vows you made
Were never to be


No comments:

Post a Comment