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Christchurch Helicopters helps rare parakeet

Published: Wed 18 Oct 2017 08:32 PM
Christchurch Helicopters helps rare parakeet
A new partnership between the Department of Conservation and Christchurch Helicopters to help save our rarest forest bird, the orange-fronted parakeet/kākāriki karaka, was announced at an event in Christchurch today.
This bright green parakeet with a distinctive orange band above its beak, numbers just a few hundred and is confined to a few beech-clad valleys in the Canterbury high country and several predator-free islands.
Christchurch Helicopters Director and pilot Richie McCaw landed the company’s specially painted orange-fronted parakeet helicopter at the Addington Racecourse event, aimed to raise the profile of this little-known bird.
DOC Eastern South Island Operations Director Andy Roberts said the new partnership was an exciting initiative and would help to boost recovery efforts.
“Orange-fronted parakeets are in serious trouble but with focused conservation efforts and the support of others, we believe we can save the species.”
“The partnership with Christchurch Helicopters will directly support activities to enhance the parakeet population and protect it from predators.”
“DOC applauds conservation tourism operators like Christchurch Helicopters that choose to give back to nature by helping to conserve our unique wildlife.”
Christchurch Helicopters CEO Terry Murdoch said the idea to get behind the orange-fronted parakeet came from staff and reflected the company’s values.
"As CEO of Christchurch Helicopters, I am proud of how our staff have embraced our environmental responsibilities. Our organisation is dedicated to assisting DOC to help it secure the survival of this rare parakeet and create the legacy we wish to leave for future generations.”
Christchurch Helicopters will support DOC’s work to protect the orange-fronted parakeet by transporting staff, equipment, eggs and birds to and from conservation areas, as well as donating a proportion of customers’ ticket price to specific projects for the species’ recovery.
The Isaac Conservation and Wildlife Trust is also a key partner with DOC in the orange-fronted parakeet programme and has bred more than 400 parakeets in captivity since 2003 for release on predator-free islands and back into Canterbury valleys.
The ‘Save Canterbury’s Kākāriki’ event was part of Conservation Week (14-22 October) and this year DOC is trying to get people to convert their love of nature into action.
–Ends–

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