Photo by Herb Christophers, DOC
A new round of monitoring in a 20-year programme has shown an impressive four-fold increase in the population of kākā in
the North Island’s Pureora Forest.
The Department of Conservation has been monitoring the indigenous forest parrots in Pureora Forest’s 1150ha Waipapa
Block for 20 years, with the aim of determining if Department of Conservation (DOC) integrated predator control work
correlates to species protection and population growth, says DOC Science Advisor Monitoring Terry Greene.
“What the long-term monitoring has shown is a four-fold increase in the population of kākā at this site – from an
estimated 640 birds in 2000, to an estimated 2600 birds in October 2020,” he says.
“This is a very impressive result from our work to protect this species over the past twenty years.”
The North Island kaka found in Pureora are classified as “at risk, recovering”. Although common in New Zealand in
pre-European times, by the 1930s they were reduced to localised populations in a small number of areas – including
Pureora. Kākā are known for their boisterous morning and evening group socialising, with amusing antics and raucous
calling.
The major threat to the kākā is predation by stoats and possums, with hole-nesting female kākā particularly at risk.
Terry Greene says the monitoring work, completed in October, determined population size (estimates of density or
abundance) through the point-based distance sampling method. Distance sampling is a widely used methodology for
estimating animal density and abundance in a particular area.
“For this work, we visited 130 points on a grid within Waipapa, and people equipped with laser range finders measured
the distance to kaka within a 100m radius of each of those points,” Terry Greene says. “Using a mathematical model, we
can estimate the population density based on detections from those points.”
The observers who did the monitoring work in the field said it was immediately apparent the kākā were very common in the
forest.
“Our observers also noted plenty of other birdlife in the area – a very positive sign our long-term conservation and
predator control work is paying off,” Terry Greene says.
“It’s also worth noting the comparison in the time spend monitoring the birds in 2020, compared to previous years. This
time, the groups of observers required only five survey days to get the required observations done.
“When these counts were initiated, back in 2000, it would often take almost twice as many survey days to accumulate the
required minimum of 80 observations for robust estimation of population density.”
“We’re very pleased with the result as it demonstrates how valuable ongoing conservation work is in protecting native
species and rebuilding their populations.”
The Waipapa block has been the site of predator control using aerial 1080 in 2016, as part of DOC’s Tiakina Nga Manu
programme (previously Battle For Our Birds). DOC also has ground-based predator control programmes for the Waipapa
block.
Te Hau Kainga o Pureora Secretary Frances Hughes says the predator control work over several decades in Pureora has
noticeably benefitted the forest’s birdlife.
“We have a beautiful pristine forest, amplified with the loud calls of the Kaka and the beautiful chorus of the Kokako,
Tui, Toutouwai, and many, many others, that remind us of our childhood days,” she says.
“Predator control must remain in place, be maintained and developed regularly, to combat the resistance and behavioural
patterns of these predators, to totally eradicate them.”