K2

Kiwi K2


K2
was hatched at the Bird Recovery Centre in approximately 1995, and suffered a splayed leg; this is a common problem with ratites in captivity (ostrich, emu & kiwi), and can occur in other birds. It occurs when the freshly hatched chick is kept on a slippery surface and their legs aren’t strong enough to come together and hold them up, but nowadays grippy mats are put in the brooder and it is uncommon. K2’s leg was twisted around so that his foot pointed backwards. He used to get around using his beak as a prop and dragging his bad leg along.

His parents were from Hodge’s Bush (same place as Iti; Whangarei Kiwi Sanctuary), so his egg was probably an Operation Nest Egg deliberately taken for hatching and rearing, but could have been an abandoned egg that was rescued.

In 2002 he was sent to Auckland Zoo.

There were then discussions about what to do with him:

  1. Leave him as he was
  2. Euthanize him
  3. Operate to turn his foot around so that he could be used in the breeding program.

Option 3 was chosen and the operation was carried out by a vets’ practice in Auckland (not the zoo vets). His leg bone was cut, rotated and plated with a plate normally used for dogs, but the screws worked loose, so they operated again and used a different sort of plate. Some money was provided by the Bank of New Zealand Kiwi Recovery (now B of NZ Save the Kiwi) and I believe some money came from WDC.

He was returned to the Whangarei Kiwi House when he was recovered from the operation and physiotherapy was carried out first by Sue Bell, and other DOC staff, and then by Kevin.

On 29/11/06 he was flown to Willowbank, Christchurch, by Air New Zealand, to be paired with Hinemoa, who was to be transferred from Te Puia, Roturua, following the death of her previous mate. Unfortunately she died before she could be transferred. K2 is currently in an outside pen at Willowbank awaiting this year’s breeding and transfer recommendations.

Manuiti

Kiwi MANUITI

HATCHED: Auckland Zoo, 29/10/1998
Hand Reared

PARENTS: Both held at Auckland Zoo.
Both were wild Northland birds and came via the Whangarei Bird Recovery, but I haven’t been able to find out the circumstances. One came from Tangitororia and I know that area was cleared by roller-crushing; some birds were rescued and translocated, so it may have been one of those, or an egg that was rescued. The other parent is recorded as coming from Sim Gibb’s. I have read somewhere that Sim Gibb was an early kiwi conservation worker and from what I remember he was in the Far North, he did some hatching and rescue, but I don’t think he was DOC; unfortunately I can’t remember where I saw that.

TRANSFERRED TO LIMESTONE ISLAND: 11/3/2002 to pair with Baldrick (a female!)

ARRIVED WHANGAREI KIWI HOUSE: 25/11/2003 in very poor condition having been beaten up by other kiwi on the island.

Baldrick has been paired with another kiwi, Glen, and they have gone on to breed successfully.

April 2006 Transferred from the outdoor pen into the nocturnal house.

Iti

Hatched 4/1/06

At Hodge’s Bush, a small study site on private land NW of Kamo (part of the Whangarei Kiwi Sanctuary). Father, Joshua, has been studied for 10-12 years.

Iti had been transmittered since hatching and had been closely monitored with 2 weekly checks alternating position only and full weight & measurement check.

Found 18/12/06 with a broken mandible by Paul Cornille of DOC. After an initial assessment by the vet she was sent to Massey University Wildlife Ward. She has 19mm missing from her bottom beak, and although her top beak was broken, it has repaired very bent. Fortunately her nostrils and the sensors at the tip of her top beak are alright.

She spent about 3 weeks at the Massey University Wildlife Ward before being flown back up to Whangarei and coming to the Kiwi House. She arrived at Whangarei Kiwi House on 10/1/07.

Hand-feeding her was a messy and time-consuming process, but after some experimentation with different food containers, she is now feeding herself really well.

She has recovered all the weight she had lost and has continued to increase. She will now stay in captivity and, as she is coping so well, will join the breeding programme.

We are still waiting to hear from the National Coordinators whether we can pair Iti with one of our males.


Ngahuru

Hatch date 22/4/2000. Captive bred at Auckland Zoo (both parents were captive at the zoo).

Transferred to Wellington Zoo 5/3/2001

Transferred back to Auckland Zoo 15/11/2004.

Had been DNA sexed as a female when a chick.

Paired up with a male in June 2005.

In June 2006 DNA retest on the basis of no nesting behaviour and Ngahuru’s short beak and light weight confirmed Ngahuru as male!

Transferred here 5/3/2007, doing well and calling at night

Kakama kiwi

Updates occasionally appear on the Pukaha Mt. Bruce website


Kakama update

Latest from the Mt Bruce ranger 6/6/07 (Colorado was released at the same time, but is also male):

“Hiya folks

We had a transmitter change on both Colorado and Kakama last week - they haven't gone that far from the release site - only about 800m south and they have climbed to near the top of a short spur and are occasionally found on the main ridge right behind the National Wildlife Centre. They have stayed close to each other since the release, occasionally even in the same burrow!

Colorado weighs in at 1940g (60 above release weight) and is in good condition

Kakama weighs 1650g (140 up on release weight) and is also in good condition.

Next check on transmitters is due in November, so I'll be able to give you a further update then.

Ka kite Tony “

Kakama leaves our Kiwi House

Kakama, the kiwi, is flying away today (Thursday 1st June), but he won’t be using his own tiny wings. He will take an Air New Zealand flight from Whangarei to Palmerston North and will spend a few days in the care of Department of Conservation staff at the National Wildlife Centre before being released into the forest at Pukaha Mt. Bruce.

Hatched at Wellington Zoo, Kakama has been to the National Wildlife Centre before, spending about 2 years in the nocturnal house there when he was a juvenile. In 1993 he was moved to Whangarei where he has been living in the nocturnal enclosure of the Kiwi House at Whangarei Museum giving visitors an insight into kiwi life. At 16, Kakama is still young by kiwi standards which have a natural lifespan of 50 or more years.

In the forest at Pukaha Mt. Bruce he will be joining other kiwi bred in captivity in an attempt to re-establish kiwi where they have been absent for over 100 years. Pukaha Mt. Bruce is 942ha of primeval forest, a remnant of 70 Mile Bush which once stretched from Masterton to Norsewood. A forest restoration project is underway with a partnership between the Department of Conservation, Rangitaane o Wairarapa and the National Wildlife Centre Trust. With the support of the local community they are dedicated to protect the forest and its inhabitants from pests enabling kiwi, and other now rare birds, to once again flourish in their natural habitat for generations to come. Pest management has been carried out in the forest and will continue, and aided by the Greater Wellington and Horizons Regional Councils, in a 2700ha buffer zone around it. This not only benefits kiwi as kaka and kokako have also been reintroduced and are breeding well.

In other areas kiwi are not as lucky as the kiwi population is halving every decade in areas where pests are not being controlled. Without help, this rate of decline would mean that kiwi will be extinct on the mainland within a lifetime. The major cause of decline is mammalian predators that were introduced by people. Kiwi are only adapted to predation by other birds, not by mammals. Less than 5 out of every 100 kiwi chicks survive to adulthood; most of the others are killed by stoats, ferrets and cats. The major cause of death in adult kiwi is the domestic dog, pig dogs, farm dogs and pet dogs, ferrets can kill adult kiwi too, and in Northland quite a lot are killed on the roads.

Kakama was moved from the Kiwi House to an outside pen 2 months ago, so that he could get used to the day and night the right way round. The resident morepork accompanied him while the nocturnal enclosure was given a makeover, much to the consternation of the local bird population, who kept up a continuous loud chorus of alarm calls. After three days of hard work by staff and volunteers, and a generous donation of plants by Simon Vallings of Forest Floor Nurseries, the morepork returned to the nocturnal house with another kiwi, Manuiti. Manuiti is settling in well now that he has got used to the reversed day and night, an effect similar to jet-lag.

Kakama’s progress in the wild will be monitored; it is hoped that he and his offspring will flourish and that the nights will once again echo with their distinctive piercing calls.

Kakama

Hatched on 2/3/90 Wellington Zoo

Parents wild caught Kaikohe R-29301 (male) and Ruatahuna R-29302 (female).

Hybrid Northland / East provenance.

Spent nearly 3 years at Mt. Bruce as a juvenile, mainly in the nocturnal house. Transferred to Whangarei (Northland Regional Museum as it was then called) on 19/4/93. As far as we know he has spent most, or all, of the time here in our nocturnal house.

I did find a reference to a female being put with him in the nocturnal house at one point, but I haven’t found any information on the outcome. It would have been early in his stay here, pre 1997. Removed from the nocturnal house in April 2006, and transferred to Pukaha Mt. Bruce by air in June.

Released end of June 2006.

Photos available of Kakama in the wild 6 days out when I went to visit. Stayed around the stream for quite a while, but has now moved uphill and seems to have established a territory. 2 females are in the area, but pairing currently unconfirmed.