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Janszoon Project Kākā Breeding w/ Ron Moorhouse and Bruce Vander Lee: March 16, 2022

Janszoon Project Kākā Breeding w/ Ron Moorhouse and Bruce Vander Lee: March 16, 2022

Janszoon Project Kākā Breeding w/ Ron Moorhouse and Bruce Vander Lee: March 16, 2022 Janszoon Project Kākā Breeding w/ Ron Moorhouse and Bruce Vander Lee: March 16, 2022, 40.9 MB
Wednesday, March 16, 2022

The Abel Tasman National Park is currently coming alive to the sound of young kākā following a successful breeding season for the park’s resident birds. Collaborators on the breeding programme including Project Janszoon, DOC and the Abel Tasman Birdsong Trust are all celebrating the successful fledging of eight chicks from three nests in the Bark Bay and Torrent Bay areas. 

In 2015, Kākā were virtually extinct in the park with only a few wild male birds surviving there. Since then a total of 35 captive-bred birds have been released, with the last release happening in 2019. Most of these birds came from captive South Island kaka but about a third were raised from eggs or chicks collected from Nelson Lakes and Kahurangi National Parks. This year’s chicks were all banded and fitted with a transmitter before they left their nests. They are particularly vulnerable in the period between leaving the nest and learning to fly, which can take up to a week, but most are now competent flyers and adding their tunes to the chorus of the park.

This week on the Wire, Frances speaks with ornithologist Ron Moorhouse and Project Janszoon’s Project Director Bruce Vander Lee about the much loved birds and conservation in the area.