Fiordland island could be used as endangered bird haven

3:57 pm on 12 August 2023
A close up shot of an orange fronted parakeet on the forest floor. It is a green bird with a small orange strip above its beak and a few blue feathers at the end of its wings.

There are only around 400 kākāriki karaka, or orange-fronted parakeets left in New Zealand. File photo Photo: Sean McGrath

Conservationists have set their sights on a new home for New Zealand's rarest parakeet species, to help boost its population.

The Department of Conservation and Te Rūnanga o Ngāi Tahu are proposing that Pukenui Island in Fiordland becomes a new habitat for kākāriki karaka, or orange-fronted parakeets.

DOC's kākāriki karaka operations manager, Wayne Beggs, said there were only about four-hundred of the birds left in the country and establishing a population on the island would be significant to their recovery.

"On the mainland they're really vulnerable to predators so it's quite a lot of effort to protect them from rats and stoats especially."

Beggs hoped the parakeets could be released at Pukenui Island in spring 2024.

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