South Island kākā
Image: Sabine Bernert | ©

Archived content: This media release was accurate on the date of publication. 

Introduction

DOC has launched a captive breeding programme for kākā in the northern South Island.

Date:  10 July 2017 Source:  Department of Conservation and Project Janszoon

A desire to improve the genetic diversity of kākā released into the Abel Tasman National Park has seen the launch of a northern South Island kākā captive breeding programme.

The programme, run by Project Janszoon and the Department of Conservation (DOC), today reached a milestone with three male kākā introduced to four females at Nelson’s Natureland Wildlife Trust in the hope they will form breeding pairs.

“This is the beginning of a reinvigoration of the captive breeding population in the north of the South Island. These birds all have genetic links to the top of the south and will potentially create three breeding pairs that could start reproducing as early as next year,” says DOC’s South Island Captive Kākā Breeding co-ordinator Rosemary Vander Lee.

Genetic inbreeding in bird populations was recently highlighted as a threat to native birds in the Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment’s report, Taonga of an Island Nation: Saving New Zealand’s Birds.

Project Janszoon ornithologist Ron Moorhouse says the large, gregarious parrots are very rare in the Abel Tasman and until now it has been difficult to source kākā with the best genetic links to release.

“Birds need genetic diversity to survive and we can now establish a northern South Island breeding population of young birds, that are not related. This new genetic stock will become the source for kākā to be released into the Abel Tasman and other top of the south locations,” he says.

The three male kākā have been raised at Natureland Wildlife Trust since they were taken from wild nests in Nelson Lakes in early 2016. The female kākā all have genetic links to the northern South Island and have been raised at SouthIsland captive breeding aviaries.

“The males have been raised here since they arrived as fledgling wild birds. It is an exciting step to be able to pair them with the female kākā and we hope they will form lasting relationships and begin breeding,” says Natureland Wildlife Trust’s Meg Rutledge.

The captive breeding programme hopes to harvest more chicks from Nelson Lakes and the Wangapeka in Kahurangi National Park to further boost the breeding population and strengthen its genetic resilience. Six females in theWangapeka and two in Nelson Lakes have been captured and fitted with transmitters so that any nests can be found if they breed.

Project Janszoon is planning to restore thriving populations of kākā back into Abel Tasman National Park, through a combination of predator control and translocations of birds. Since 2015 it has successfully released four female kākā to join the small remnant population of wild male kākā.

About Project Janszoon

Project Janszoon is a privately funded trust named after Dutch Explorer Abel “Janszoon” Tasman. It is working with DOC, the Abel Tasman Birdsong Trust, the community and iwi, over a 30-year time period, to reduce predator numbers and weeds, restore eco-systems and re-introduce native birds, animals and plants in the Abel Tasman National Park.

Contact

Ron Moorhouse, Project Janszoon ornithologist
Mobile: +64 27 223 4037

Rosemary Vander Lee, Northern South Island kaka captive breeding co-ordinator
Mobile : +64 27 657 7202

Back to top