Whio Awareness Month – pucker up for NZ’s native blue duck
Media release
1 March 2017
Whio Awareness Month – pucker up for NZ’s native blue duck
DOC and Genesis
Energy are launching a whio “duckface” selfie
competition for Whio Awareness Month (1-31 March), aiming to
raise awareness of New Zealand’s native river surfing blue
duck and the fact that whio are one of New Zealand’s most
endangered birds.
Whio are rarer than kiwi with 23 kiwi for every whio.
Since 2011, DOC and Genesis Energy have worked in partnership to protect whio. This work includes raising awareness of whio, and undertaking intensive work to protect and grow numbers of whio at key sites around New Zealand.
Together, DOC and Genesis energy have boosted the number of whio protected at security and recovery sites from 300 to 533 pairs, and expanded the length of rivers protected from 831km to 1428km.
Jenny Burke, who heads the Whio Forever advocacy work for Genesis Energy says that the gains made are “very encouraging” and have prompted the company to extend their support of the programme until 2021. “By then we hope to have reversed the fortunes of whio. At the moment there are less than 3000 whio – we hope to grow the population to 5000 by 2021”.
To enter the competition take a “whio duckface selfie” and go towww.whioforever.co.nz/pucker-up. Selfies uploaded to the site, with an explanation of why they love whio, go in the draw to win a “whio ranger for a day” experience. People can also show their support of whio by posting their selfie on social media with the hashtag #whioforever.
Ends
Background Information on whio
• The whio is a threatened
species of native duck that is only found in New Zealand’s
fast flowing waters. Featured on New Zealand’s $10 note
and with an estimated nationwide population of less than
3000 birds, whio are rarer than kiwi.
• Whio are
adapted to live on fast-flowing rivers so finding whio means
you will also find clean, fast-flowing water with a good
supply of underwater insects.
• This makes whio
important indicators of ecosystem health – they only exist
where there is high quality clean and healthy
waterways.
•
WHIO FOREVER
• Genesis
Energy has a strong historic association with whio through
the Tongariro Power Scheme and in 2010 this association grew
through the establishment of Whio Awareness Month
(March).
• Today, Genesis Energy and the Department of
Conservation (DOC) continue their partnership through the
Whio Forever Programme, which aims to secure the future of
whio in the wild and ensure New Zealanders understand and
value of whio in our rivers.
• The support of Genesis
Energy and the work of DOC has enabled the Whio Recovery
Plan to be implemented.
•
CONSERVATION
ISSUE
• The whio are eaten by stoats, ferrets and
cats, with the largest impact during nesting time when eggs,
young and females are vulnerable, and also when females are
in moult and can’t fly.
• Extensive trapping can
manage these predators and work in key whio habitats by DOC
and Genesis Energy on the Whio Forever Project has already
seen an increase in whio numbers.
• Whio cannot be
moved to predator-free islands like other species because of
their reliance on large fast-flowing rivers.
• Pairs
occupy approximately 1km of water – so they need a lot of
river to sustain a large population and they fiercely defend
their territories, which makes it difficult to put them with
other ducks in captivity.
• They are susceptible to
flood events which, destroy nests, fragment broods and wash
away their valued food
source.