Another blog...

The Rakino Ratepayers Association has set up their own official blog in an effort to control the dissemination of information, here.

You may notice some similarities to this site :). I hope that this is a step towards them becoming more transparent and informing the public of their works and that they report the unvarnished truth. I see no point in attempting to rival them.
- Michael

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Kakariki


Many people will be aware of the following project which has been approved by the Department of Conservation and will take place on Rakino Island early next year. These birds will be a unique and valued addition to Rakino Island, complementing our growing population of Bellbird.

Kakariki were released on Motuihe on Saturday 17 May 2008 and TV1 is screening a segment on either the news or Closeup of the capture process and release, the same process will be followed for Rakino. This will be screened on Monday 19 May.

Cheers John



"Rare parakeets to populate gulf islands


An ambitious plan to translocate 100 kakariki (red-crowned parakeets) from Little Barrier Island to two other Hauraki Gulf islands as well as a mainland site means more people will be able to see the rare birds.

Conservation researcher Luis Ortiz-Catedral, based at Massey University in Auckland, is from Mexico, a land of more raucous, garishly coloured parrots than New Zealand’s subtle-hued species. But it is our small green, long-tailed kakariki that have captured his interest in recent years.

As well as studying a small population of translocated orange-fronted kakariki, which are extremely rare and critically endangered, on remote Maud Island in the Marlborough Sounds, he is planning a large-scale translocation further north of their relative, the red-crowned kakariki. The two-pronged project is part of his doctoral thesis as a researcher at the Institute of Natural Resources, comparing how wild and captive birds cope with translocation.

The red-crowned kakariki thrive in abundance on Little Barrier Island, a protected conservation reserve. Mr Ortiz-Catedral is organising a project to capture then release the 100 birds at Rakino and Motuihe Islands as well as Tawharanui conservation reserve north of Auckland.

This will expand the geographical range of the species and enable scientists and conservationists to better understand how newly located translocated kakariki cope with the change.

A team of volunteers will help him record data of the birds’ health before they are taken by helicopter to neighbouring locations for release. They will then track, observe and record the birds’ feeding, social and breeding behaviour using electronic transmitters once they are in their new habitats.

Since 2004, he has studied the nesting biology and nesting growth of the red-crowned kakariki on Tiritiri Matangi Island, a world famous bird sanctuary also in the Hauraki Gulf.

The outlook for the next series of translocations is promising, he says. The birds, once populous throughout New Zealand but now found only on predator-free offshore islands, are good breeders. A female can produce up to nine chicks in a season. But it was their habit of foraging and nesting on the ground that evolved during New Zealand’s isolated, predator-free epoch that made them fatally vulnerable to predators such as rats, cats and stoats that were later introduced.

The project, he says, is not purely scientific. "There’s also the spiritual appeal that we are returning the parakeets to places they once belonged. It has a powerful symbolic side to it.”

Kakariki may even take flight and do their own relocating once closer to other islands and the mainland, he adds. “Who knows, one day we might see kakariki in Albert Park.”"

Source: Massey University

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Wonderful news. However I believe we have more serious issues like transport to and from the island that need to be addressed as a PRIORITY before we
worry about birds getting to and from the island. Comments please?????

Anonymous said...

Why dont DOC continue with the RAMNUS programe first and get this under control. How much was spent by DOC on the "invisible rat" ............... will be very interesting to know that amount of money. Are we a DOC reserve? Does that mean we dont have to pay rates?? Comments please.

Anonymous said...

I think DoC spent in the order of $7,000 on rat campaign. Could have been better spent removing weeds or Ramnus as you say. I think that rates would be far superior to being a DoC reserves, imagine the freedoms that would be curtailed become one of them! The transport seems to be chugging along fine if you discount rumours, Reuben's deny anything to do with liquidation/receivership.

Anonymous said...

Hello all: There is a possibility that kakariki might actually control Ramnus since they chew seeds and do not disperse them (unlike blackbirds) so you might even get that problem sorted in a natural way.

Anonymous said...

Love the thought of Kakariki being on the island as long as it in no way restricts our activity on the island as private owners and least of all provides DOC with the platform to control how we enjoy our wonderfull island. We should question why DOC would release an endangered bird onto an island 99% in private ownership. They should clearly state that there is no threat to our existance or our rights as land owners before they release the birds.