2013-2014 kiwi egg-lift season kicks off in Hawke’s Bay
5 September 2013
Bocky the kiwi marks Trust’s home hundred
2013-2014 kiwi egg-lift season kicks off in Hawke’s Bay
The Forest Lifeforce Restoration (FLR) Trust has returned its 100th kiwi chick to the inland Hawke’s Bay forest from where its egg was taken. The male bird, named Bocky after well-known local bushman Allan Bockman, was incubated at Kiwi Encounter in Rotorua and reared in a predator-free area at the Cape Sanctuary south of Napier.
The Maungataniwha Kiwi Project is part of BNZ Operation Nest Egg and is fast carving out a name for itself as one of the most prolific and successful kiwi conservation initiatives in the country. Since its inception in 2006 it has harvested 300 eggs and seen 163 chicks released back into the wild.
This 54 percent survival rate contrasts starkly with the five percent chance that kiwi have of making it to adulthood if their eggs are left in the bush unprotected against predators.
Population modelling suggests around 200 kiwi would need to be released back into Maungataniwha to make the population there secure for the next 30 years.
Eggs are taken from the Trust’s property in the Maungataniwha Native Forest adjacent to Te Urewera National Park and sent to Kiwi Encounter for incubation. The resulting chicks are then reared at the Cape Sanctuary until they are large enough to defend themselves against predators, before being returned to the wild at Maungataniwha.
In the early stages of the project some of the Maungataniwha chicks remained at the Cape Sanctuary to help form a breeding population there.
Bocky is the project’s second notable hundred. In February 2012 Trust patron Rachel Hunter released Takamoana, the 100th chick reared by the project as a whole.
Bocky was among a group of five kiwi brought back to Maungataniwha from the Cape Sanctuary last month (August).
The Trust expects to send at least 18 eggs to Kiwi Encounter for incubation this season. Eight of the male kiwi it tracks are nesting at the moment and the first egg-lifts of the season took place this week, yielding two viable eggs.
In addition to the Maungataniwha Kiwi Project the Trust runs a series of native flora and fauna regeneration projects. These include a drive to increase the wild-grown population of Kakabeak (Clianthus maximus), an extremely rare type of shrub, and the re-establishment of native plants and forest on 4,000 hectares currently, or until recently, under pine.
About the Forest Lifeforce Restoration
Trust
The Forest Lifeforce Restoration Trust was
established in 2006 to provide direction and funding for the
restoration of threatened species of fauna and flora, and to
restore the ngahere mauri (forest lifeforce)
in native forests within the Central North Island.
It runs eight main regeneration and restoration projects, involving native New Zealand flora and fauna, on three properties in the central North Island. It also owns a property in the South Island’s Fiordland National Park.
ENDS