Kakapo season 2019.

If I interpret the Kakapo Recovery Facebook page correctly, a total of approximately 149 eggs are laid sofar, of which about 64 were fertile.

Some fertile eggs were lost, but 8 have already hatched and all eggs were removed to stimulate the females to lay a second nest. Mating has already occured and one female already lay again.

Not bad for a population of just 147 birds. This is starting to look like an incredible year for the Kakapo!
 
Currently they have 22 chicks and one that died. They have been closing nests and incubating eggs in the hope the females will lay again because they started early. There are still 36 or 38 known fertile eggs (not sure if this number included the 2 more recent hatches because of the way it was posted) but they hope for more because more mating is occurring.
 
I'm 99% sure that he meant that the animals were starting to reproduce, and it would be an eventful year for the hatchings, egglaying, and what not.
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110 fertile eggs and another 10 to check for fertility in next few weeks! 57 live chicks out of 61 hatched. Another 18 viable eggs still to hatch. 34 chicks on Anchor + and another 23 still being handreared!!! Some kakapo females have been given 3 chicks ... a first! The rimu fruiting is extraordinary and most chicks out in nest are the fattest ever! From newest podcast of 15.3.2019!!!!
 
There has been an outbreak of aspergillosis which has already killed a number of birds.

At the time of this article from 15th May (Worrying times for kākāpō), three chicks and one adult bird (the famous female Hoki) had died from aspergillosis over the past week and three other birds (a chick and two adult males) had died from unrelated causes over the past fortnight. The remaining population at the time of the article was 144 adults and 72 chicks.

A tweet from Andrew Digby (Dr Andrew Digby (@takapodigs) | Twitter) from 21 May says that thirteen Kakapo are at Auckland Zoo's hospital, one of which (an adult female, Huhana) was not expected to survive - she was euthanised on 23rd May, leaving 142 adults.* On 25 May (yesterday) he says there are now 22 birds on the mainland for treatment.


*Noting the discrepancy between this 142 figure and the 144 figure in the paragraph above, I think this is because another bird is being treated as dead after not being seen for several years, making that one the 143rd bird.
 
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