Chlidonias

common kookaburras (Dacelo novaeguineae)

Photographed in the Upper Waiwera Valley north of Auckland, September 2012

Several lots of kookaburras were released in various parts of New Zealand in the late 1800s. The only ones to establish were those released on Kawau Island by George Grey (between 1862 and 1867 he released all sorts of animals there including zebras and monkeys: the best-known of his introductions were the wallabies which included amongst their number the parma wallaby).

Kookaburras are not well established in NZ, it must be said. They occur only in small numbers in the top part of the North Island, largely in the area near to Kawau. The most likely reason for this is the lack of large amounts of suitable food (large-bodied invertebrates and reptiles).

I was deliberately looking for them on this trip, but it was still pretty weird seeing them in NZ (along with the pelicans the day before).
Photographed in the Upper Waiwera Valley north of Auckland, September 2012

Several lots of kookaburras were released in various parts of New Zealand in the late 1800s. The only ones to establish were those released on Kawau Island by George Grey (between 1862 and 1867 he released all sorts of animals there including zebras and monkeys: the best-known of his introductions were the wallabies which included amongst their number the parma wallaby).

Kookaburras are not well established in NZ, it must be said. They occur only in small numbers in the top part of the North Island, largely in the area near to Kawau. The most likely reason for this is the lack of large amounts of suitable food (large-bodied invertebrates and reptiles).

I was deliberately looking for them on this trip, but it was still pretty weird seeing them in NZ (along with the pelicans the day before).
 
Didn't know about Kookaburras in NZ ! Are they having any kind of protection-status or can they be hunted / catched freely ?
 
they are listed under the Wildlife Act as "not protected". There shouldn't be any issues with catching or shooting them, but you *may* need a licence to keep them in aviaries.
 
OK NZ-laws are as clear as Dutch-laws !
NZ laws are pretty clear, I just hadn't checked whether the permit was needed for holding them alive. Kookaburra are listed under Schedule 5 which is animals not protected for which no permit is needed to hold them. (Other Schedules include, for example, animals which are not protected under the Wildlife Act but which fall under other Acts because they are pests [eg stoats - so you can kill as many stoats as you like but you cannot keep one alive without a permit]).

So kookaburra can be kept without a permit.
 

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