Kakapo season 2015-16 (and then on until the next breeding season)

Chlidonias

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15+ year member
Threads for the previous years:
http://www.zoochat.com/17/kakapo-season-2009-a-63705/
http://www.zoochat.com/17/kakapo-season-2010-2013-a-154877/
http://www.zoochat.com/17/kakapo-season-2013-14-a-348595/

Sad news to start off this season's thread: a young female has been found dead, bring the world population down to 125.

Female kakapo found dead on Codfish Island | Radio New Zealand News
The death of the young bird, named Ellie, reduces the total population of the critically endangered bird down to 125.

Kakapo Recovery rangers, who found her body last week, said there was no obvious sign of illness or injury.

A Conservation Services manager, Deidre Vercoe, said kakapo could live to be 60 so Ellie's death at 16 was a tragedy.

She said the loss was softened by the likelihood of a bumper breeding season ahead.

More than 25 chicks may be born because of rimu and beech masts due on Codfish and Anchor islands during the season, she said.
 
That is an optimistic number. Let's keep our fingers crossed and hope Deidre's expectations will be met.
 
From Facebook Christmas Day
The Kakapo boys are booming! Happy New Year kakapo supporters! After a frantically busy lead up to the Christmas break, the kakapo team is preparing for a breeding season :)
Unfortunately El Nino has had an impact, with the first mating expected a month later than normal, in early February. The weather pattern has also affected the amount of rimu fruit available on Codfish Island/Whenua Hou, which will have an impact on chick numbers - perhaps 15 to 18 in total - but we really aren't sure.

Posted 14/1/15

45 minutes is all it took for two kakapo to successfully mate on Anchor Island.

The dalliance between female Hine Taumai and male Takitimu has sparked hopes the species can survive for at least another generation, the Department of Conservation (DOC) said on Friday.

A ranger relied on data from Takitimu's transmitter to learn of the pair's rendezvous. He then visited the scene of the encounter, where he discovered large amounts of down from Hine Taumai, presumably lost in the throes of passion.
Kakapo successfully mate on Anchor Island
 
From Facebook 18/1/15

Woohoo! Kuia, Kuia, Kuia!! Our ONLY female with Richard Henry's precious Fiordland genes has mated for the very first time - twice!
News is flooding in from both Codfish Island/Whenua Hou and Anchor Island as our rangers translate data downloaded from the kakapo transmitters.
To date, seven females have mated, five on Anchor and two on Codfish and we're still expecting more.
Needless to say, there's been a few whoops of delight in our office and excitement levels are rising!
 
One last thing before I shut up!


Possible vitamin D link to kākāpō breeding


New research from Massey University on vitamin D could help bring New Zealand’s endemic kākāpō back from the brink of extinction.

There are only 125 of the native parrots left, but now researchers may have discovered the secret to keeping the birds breeding.

Dr Pamela von Hurst, from Massey’s School of Food and Nutrition, has just had a paper published on the study linking vitamin D in rimu fruit with the endangered parrot’s nutritional needs and breeding habits, in the Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. The research was carried out in collaboration with Professor David Raubenheimer from the University of Sydney, and staff from the Department of Conservation.

Kākāpō breed only in years when the local trees are full with fruit, which they feed to their chicks. This includes Rimu, which this new study has revealed produces berries rich in vitamin D – a nutrient essential for laying eggs and the growth of chicks.

Previous attempts to encourage breeding during years of poor fruit supply by providing supplementary food have failed. But Dr von Hurst says this latest research might be a game changer. “This could change the way we encourage breeding. Rimu berries provide kākāpō with high levels of vitamin D and calcium, meaning they are the perfect food package for breeding and nesting birds.

“The study challenges previous beliefs there are no food sources with a naturally high concentration of vitamin D. Kākāpō are forest-dwelling, nocturnal and flightless, which means minimal sun exposure, so we assumed there must be a dietary source. This confirms that.”

From the beginning of the breeding season in spring, female kākāpō consume Rimu berries, which at that time are unripe. Dr von Hurst says while the vitamin D content of the unripe berries isn’t yet known, it’s possible that vitamin D in the fruit triggers nesting in the female bird. “We know that kākāpō breed in response to rimu fruiting; this result may tell us why, and help us identify which other trees stimulate breeding.”

“The next step will include measuring the vitamin D levels of adult birds during breeding, growing chicks and rimu fruit throughout the ripening process, to see if the vitamin D content changes over time, and with it, the levels in the birds”.

The Department of Conservation’s Kākāpō Recovery Team is keen to build on this research. Dr Andrew Digby says, “This potential link between vitamin D in rimu fruit and kākāpō breeding is an exciting finding, and is a high priority for us to explore further. We have a collaborative programme in place to expand on this research in the upcoming breeding season, to further understand the link between vitamin D and kākāpō health and fertility.”
 
this link Our Changing World, Thursday 21 January 2016 | Radio New Zealand National has a long article, included in which is a description of the transmitters now being used:

Electronic surveillance and hi-tech monitoring devices that have been specially developed for the kakapo conservation programme are making a significant difference in kakapo management this year.

All male kakapo carry a small device on their back called a Check Mate. The Check Mate transmitter contains an activity sensor that records how active the bird is, for example whether it’s running towards a feeding station or energetically shaking during a mating.

The Check Mate also contains a proximity sensor to detect the transmitter of any nearby females, and it logs how long she stays around the male. The date and time of the interaction is recorded, and the ‘quality’ of the interaction is also calculated.

The Check Mate transmitter relays all this information via a complex series of beeps, that can either be ‘read’ in the field by a ranger using a radio telemetry set or relayed remotely.

Every morning, between 5am and 7am, the Check Mate transmitters ‘‘talk’’ to a system of electronic receivers called Errols. The Errols are located on strategic highpoints on the kakapo islands. Once they have recorded all the data they transmit it via satellite or a cellphone network to a laptop computer, nick-named the Train Station.

“The rangers on the island can wake up to an email each morning telling them what has happened overnight,” Eason says.

Each female kakapo carries a different kind of transmitter known as an Egg-Timer transmitter. These were developed for use with kiwi and have been refined for kakapo. Egg-Timer transmitters log the daily activity of a female kakapo. Usually she is active for about 9 hours a night, especially if she is travelling long distances to find a mate. But when she starts incubating eggs this will plummet to about 2 hours a night, alerting the rangers to the fact that she has begun nesting. Once again this data can be detected by a ranger in the field or sent via an Errol. “It saves us a lot of time walking around islands trying to locate every female kakapo,” Eason says.
 
Good and bad news - from Facebook

The first [chick] for 2016, is also a first for 7-year-old Tiwhiri AND the first ever to hatch on Anchor Island!! It was first discovered by rangers viewing Tiwhiri's nest camera yesterday and it was checked and weighed last night by rangers ...both mother and chick doing very well!!

While we are celebrating the arrival of our first chick for the year, we are saddened by the sudden loss of Smoko:
He died, possibly as a result of a fight with another male, on Codfish Island/Whenua Hou on Tuesday. He was first discovered on Stewart Island 25 years ago, so his age is unknown. He fathered two chicks in 2009 and had mated with Pura, 10 days before his death. His body has been sent to Auckland Zoo where vets will investigate the cause. Of the 125 remaining kākāpō, there are 31 unknown age birds, which were discovered on Stewart Island, the majority during the late 1980s.Potentially, quite a few of these kākāpō could be quite old – 60 years-plus even, so deaths within that group are to be expected.
 
Kuia's first chick has hatched, making it just the fourth living kakapo to have unique Fiordland genes!
The chick is feeding and doing well.
 
Kuia's first chick has hatched, making it just the fourth living kakapo to have unique Fiordland genes!
The chick is feeding and doing well.
from 21 Feb (at https://www.facebook.com/KakapoRecovery/ for anyone else):

Here's the lastest news! Kuia's second egg has hatched AND she has mated again so a another clutch is possible! Hine Taumai also has a chick on the nest, bringing the total to four!
AND, to date, we have had 30 confirmed fertile eggs, with more nests still to be discovered...busy, busy, busy!
 
there's an article here about Kuia's eggs: Kakapo?s nest site not eggsactly ideal | Otago Daily Times Online News : Otago, South Island, New Zealand & International News

Kuia, held to be the world's most genetically important female kakapo, has mated for the first time and laid three eggs on Anchor Island in Dusky Sound, Fiordland.

However, her road to motherhood has had a rocky start.

Kakapo advocacy ranger Karen Arnold said yesterday Kuia had made her nest near a seal colony and had been bothered by sandflies, so Department of Conservation (Doc) staff had dismantled the nest.

The eggs were believed to be fertile, which she said was ‘‘fantastic news''.

Two eggs were being artificially incubated and one had been placed with another kakapo mother.

Since it was early in the breeding season, it was hoped Kuia would lay again and choose a better nest site, Ms Arnold said.

After being close to extinction in the 1970s, kakapo now number 125 through the Doc recovery programme.

Populations of the native parrots now live on Anchor Island, Codfish Island/Whenua Hou in Foveaux Strait and Little Barrier Island/Hauturu in the Hauraki Gulf.

Kuia (18) is one of three siblings that carry the precious genes of their father, the last remaining Fiordland kakapo.

Her brothers have not fathered chicks yet.

Ms Arnold said kakapo were first transferred to Anchor Island in 2005 but only one female had mated there since, in 2011.

This year, an unprecedented 15 females were known to have mated and staff were ‘‘very excited'' about the prospect of chicks soon.

Breeding activity on Codfish was ‘‘steady'', she said, with six known matings and at least one nest so far.

Doc kakapo/takahe operations manager Deidre Vercoe said it was suspected the Anchor Island females had been spurred into action because of the abundance of beech tree seeds this year.

Beech trees do not produce seeds every year.

‘‘It would be significant for the recovery programme if it was determined the females had responded to the beech mast, because such behaviour hasn't been observed before,'' she said.

Kakapo breed very slowly.

No chicks have been born since 2014, when six were successfully raised. However, given the right conditions, kakapo will breed well.

In 2002, 24 chicks were added to the Codfish Island population in a matter of months, and 33 were born there in 2009.
 
A couple of other facts gleaned from their latest FB posts;

There are 23 chicks so far across WH and Anchor Islands.

One of the chicks from the (50% Fiordland) female Kuia's first clutch died, but a second is surviving.

This must be one of the most complex and fully documented/publicised recovery programmes anywhere!

Incidentally, would anyone know if male 'PiriPiri' (who does not appear to have ever bred) is still alive and his current whereabouts?
 
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