Zealandia 2012 News

zooboy28

Well-Known Member
Doesn't seem to be a thread on news from Zealandia, a native bird sanctuary in Wellington City, although there are some recent discussions on the following thread:

http://www.zoochat.com/17/wellington-attractions-merge-272270/

And a good general discussion here:

http://www.zoochat.com/17/karori-198205/

And Hix detailed his visit somewhere too, and put a heap of photos in the gallery: Zealandia Gallery

Anywho, Zealandia have again made the news, this time with a world-first:

Transgender Korimako Confounds Zealandia | Stuff.co.nz

Zealandia could be home to New Zealand's first transgender korimako, dubbed the ''butch bellbird''.

Staff at Karori's Zealandia eco-sanctuary use the nickname because the young bellbird has DNA tested as female but acts like a male, and has a mix of each sex's plumage.

Victoria University moult expert Ben Bell was intrigued to hear about the bird's plumage.

"It could be due to a hormonal imbalance or it could be a reaction to shock or an incomplete moult - given the appearance and behaviour, any of those would be unusual though."

It is the first species Zealandia staff have seen showing the unusual gender mix.

About the size of a sparrow, bellbirds are dark olive-green with red eyes.

Both sexes look similar except the male is tinted blue around its beak and eyes, while the female has a white stripe extending back from the bill.

Zealandia conservation officer Erin Jeneway was the first to notice the ''butch bellbird.''

"There's something we can't pin down. We haven't seen anything like this before," she said.

Ms Jeneway refers to the bird as "her" while coworker Matu Booth uses "him" - both hope to find out who's right if the bird survives and breeds.

When the bird was a chick, a feather sample was sent to Massey University for genetic testing, which showed the bird was female.

Now 18 months old, it has the white cheek stripe of a female on one side, but the dark body plumage of a male.

When feeding, the honey eater doesn't flit between flowers like a female, but moves more deliberately, primed to defend attractive food resources.

The bird's calls have also been mixed - it makes both male calls and the lively "chup chup" of the female, but these are much louder and more frequent than is usual for females.

However, the mixed song is less unusual than the plumage and behaviour.

A key note in New Zealand's dawn chorus, bellbirds are known for their sonorous chiming call, which is like a tui but more tonally pure.

The ''butch bellbird'' had been seen frequently around Zealandia's northwest scarp but often forages in unprotected habitat beyond the fence so is at risk from mammalian pests.
 
To my recollection it's not merely a 'bird sanctuary', featuring tuatara, weta, green lizards the name of which escapes me... to name a few.
 
400th Kaka Tagged

Zealandia has tagged its 400th Kaka, just ten years after the species was introduced to the sanctuary.

Story here: Zealandia Tags 400th Kaka - news - dominion-post | Stuff.co.nz

Wellington's Zealandia has tagged its 400th kaka since the native parrot was introduced to the sanctuary in 2002.

Volunteers Judy and Linton Miller, of Ngaio, celebrated the milestone while placing unique identification bands on four chicks from the same nest yesterday.

The process involves taking various measurements, then microchipping them for monitoring.

Zealandia's Lauren Schaer said the bands could keep track of how long each bird lived, where they bred, and breeding partners.

It is understood there are now 200 to 250 kaka in the valley, which provides a predator-free, safe environment for breeding.

"Locally, they were very rare in Wellington. While the sanctuary is here, they have crucial support."
 
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