Zoo produces 90th kea chick - New Zealand news on Stuff.co.nz
Scoop: Hamilton Zoo has welcomes kea chick
Zoo produces 90th kea chick
Friday, 26 September 2008
AdvertisementHamilton Zoo has bred its first kea chick in 15 years, after being given permission to boost the numbers in captivity.
Only 100 kea are kept in captivity throughout the country in a managed breeding programme, and when Hamilton was given the nod to put first-time parents, Tane (15) and Kowhai (9) to work, numbers had fallen to 89. The pair laid three eggs.
"Four zoos have been asked to each breed a chick this year, if possible," said Hamilton Zoo director Stephen Standley.
"We were very excited when the recommendation to breed came through, and especially when our birds were quick to respond and produced a healthy chick.
"We destroyed two eggs and replaced them with dummy eggs."
The zoo did not wait to select the healthiest fledgling because that would mean killing the chicks which were rejected -- a move unlikely to be popular with the public.
The remaining egg hatched on September 15, and the chick will take up to 13 weeks to leave the nest so won't be on show to the public until around mid-December.
Kea pairs bond for life and are the world's only alpine parrot, with fewer than 5000 remaining in the wild in the South Island's high country.
High country farmers used to carry cut-down shotguns to shoot kea they claimed were attacking lambs, but that practice was outlawed in 1986.
Federated Farmers high country spokesman Donald Aubrey told the NZ Herald that kea attacks were a known hazard for high-country farmers.
"They target the area around a sheep's kidneys," Mr Aubrey said.
"They do that by riding on the back of the sheep and pecking around the spinal region."
Scoop: Hamilton Zoo has welcomes kea chick
Hamilton Zoo has welcomes kea chick
Friday, 26 September 2008, 3:23 pm
Press Release: Hamilton Zoo
26 SEPTEMBER 2008
Hamilton Zoo has welcomed its first kea chick in 15 years.
The unnamed chick, whose sex is not yet known, was hatched on 15 September to first-time parents, Tane (15) and Kowhai (9). The chick will take up to 13 weeks to leave the nest so won’t be visible to the public until around mid-December.
There hasn’t been breeding of kea at Hamilton Zoo for many years due to restrictions on the number of the birds able to be bred in captivity. Hamilton Zoo Director Stephen Standley said the facility was thrilled when they were given the green light for their kea pair to breed.
“We are very excited when the recommendation to breed came through, and especially when our birds were quick to respond and produced a healthy chick,” he said.
Kea pairs bond for life and are thought to be the world’s smartest bird. They are the world’s only alpine parrot, with less than 5000 currently remaining in the wild in the New Zealand’s Southern Alps. Reports that keas were attacking sheep and feeding on their carcasses meant they were once hunted extensively, however the species became fully protected in 1986.
Earlier this month Hamilton Zoo also welcomed another new arrival, a baby male zebra named Phoenix. Born on 2 September to mum Marble and dad Bwana, Phoenix will be on display these school holidays in the savannah enclosure.