7 Dec 2022

A good news bird story from Rarotonga

From Afternoons, 3:35 pm on 7 December 2022

The delightful little kākerōri, or Rarotonga flycatcher, has been brought back from the brink of extinction in a Cook Islands conservation success story.

A view of a lush green valley. In the foreground is some grass and some trees planted in neat rows, in the background is green bush rising up to high peaks.

The Takitumu Conservation Area covers three forested valleys, inland from the horticultural zone on the coast. Photo: Alison Ballance

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In the mid-1980s New Zealand ecologist Rod Hay identified the critically endangered kākerōri as one of the Top Ten most at-risk birds in the Pacific. The population hit a low of just 29 birds in 1989, and Rod and fellow kiwi Hugh Robertson identified ship rats and feral cats as significant threats to the species’ survival.

Kākerōri live in three forested valleys collectively known as the Takitumu Conservation Area, which lies in Rarotonga’s southeast. The TCA, as it is known locally, belongs to three land-owning families. Back in 1996, they set aside 155 hectares of forest to protect the kākerōri.

A rat control programme was extended across the Takitumu Conservation Area, and has been led since 1999 by Ian Karika. Ian, other landowners and a team of volunteers put out poison baits from September to December each year, to protect nesting birds. The bait is funded by income from guided walks into the sanctuary.

The kākerōri population has climbed steadily and on his recent trip to colour band individual birds and conduct a population census, Hugh and his colleagues estimated that the kākerōri population has reached at least 621 birds on Rarotonga.

The entrance to the conservation area with poles holding up a sign that says 'Ngai Tau-Anga Manu - Kua Paruruia' 'Keep Out - Birds Nesting'

Entrance to Takitumu Conservation Area Photo: Alison Ballance

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