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Some
common, some endangered? All
of the common birds described in this fact sheet
can fly. This helps them get away from enemies like
cats, dogs, rats, stoats and ferrets &endash; which
people brought to New Zealand. Kiwi,
kakapo and takahe, which are very endangered,
cant fly and are easily caught by
enemies. BREEDING
Laying eggs and rearing chicks. Fantails, riroriro
and silvereye have several nests, each with three
or four chicks a year. They must, to make sure a
few chicks grow up, because rats eat their eggs and
cats and stoats catch their chicks. Unlike
little birds like fantails (which live short lives
and have lots of chicks) kiwi, takahe and kakapo
live long lives and only lay one or two eggs in a
year. But if their few eggs and chicks are eaten,
there are no young birds to replace the parent
birds, which get older and older and older and
finally die. This is happening to the kiwi in New
Zealand forests. Even
where there is not native forest, fantails,
riroriro and ruru can find insects in gardens. Tui
and bellbird can sip nectar from garden flowers as
well as from native flowers. Silvereyes eat nectar,
insects and garden fruit. Seagulls can find food at
the rubbish dump as well as in the sea. So all
these birds can live in places where people are
living and native forests are gone.
Even
though they are common compared to the many
endangered native birds of New Zealand, they are
still very special and
interesting
Fantail
/ Piwakawaka 1st
prize , best mum and dad. Fantails
live in the forest and in our gardens. A pair of
fantails raise three or four families, each with
three or four chicks each summer. It is hard work.
The chicks are fed every 10 minutes, which is more
than 100 times a day! No wonder baby fantails grow
fast. 15 days after hatching blind and naked, the
chicks have grown feathers and are ready to leave
the nest. Cats,
rats, stoats and mynas are the fantails' enemies.
Of all their eggs and chicks, only a few survive
and grow up. "Im
piwakawaka, the fantail. I cheep a lot and Im
friendly, but really its the insects Im
after. People with big feet scare up the insects
and then I catch them. Moths and midges are very
small so I have to eat a lot and gather beak-fulls
for my chicks".
Bellbird
(korimako) and Tui Scientific
names: 1st
prize, sweetest singers "We
are different but
in some things we are alike,
tui and I. We sing sweet songs and we sip sweet
nectar with our special toothbrush
tongues". Both
the tui and bellbird are honey-eaters. They feed on
nectar, fruit and insects. Both birds are important
to the forest because they pollinate forest flowers
and spread small seeds. When
the bird dives into a flower to reach the nectar,
pollen sticks to its head. Then the bird flies to
another flower and pollen brushes of its
head, onto the sticky stigma. This is the beginning
of a seed. Where
are you tui and bellbird...
Grey
Warbler (Riroriro) 1st
prize, best nest builder "Im
so small and grey, you may not notice me flitting
through the garden catching insects. But listen to
my warble. I go tseetseetseetseetsee". On
the thinnest of branches, riroriro builds her
hanging nest with a verandah, to keep out enemies.
But sometimes when she is away, a shining cuckoo
will lay her egg in the nest and then the riroriro
parents will hatch and feed a cuckoo
chick! The
song of riroriro &endash; an old Maori story: in
spring, the song of the riroriro meant it was time
to plant the crops. Some people were lazy. They
didnt work hard in their gardens and in the
winter they would grumble because they were hungry.
The people who had grown plenty of food would laugh
and say, "I hea koe I te tangihanga o te riroriro?"
which means, "Where were you when the riroriro
sang?"
Red-billed
gull (tarapunga) 1st
prize, top squabbler Gulls
can most often be seen at the beach, where they eat
small marine creatures (hoppers, crabs and
shellfish), but they also spend time at the dump
&endash; because they are good at scavenging food
scraps that people throw away. Grown
up red-billed gulls have red beaks and red legs.
Young red-billed gulls have a brown beak and
legs. Gulls
live in flocks, so they have to get along with each
other. Its a bit like children at school.
Gulls squabble (just like you do at school!) but
they dont really hurt each other, and they
warn each other about danger. Can
you understand gull language? The
Black-backed gull is also native to New Zealand,
and the Black-billed gull is endemic.
Morepork
/ruru
Scientific
name: Ninox novaeseelandiae 1st
prize, quietest flyer "Shhhh.
Im trying to sleep! Ill wake up at dusk
and catch a mouse or a bird that hasnt gone
to bed. Then Ill go hunting moths and weta in
the dark." Ruru
has large eyes so he can see by the light of the
stars and the moon. His eyes face forward, like
ours do. This helps him focus on the moths he is
chasing. Most birds have their eyes on the sides of
the head, so they can see enemies coming from all
around. The
edges of rurus wing feathers are fluffy, so
he flies quite silently and no one can hear him
coming. This helps him sneak up and catch his
prey. Ruru
usually lay two eggs in October or November. The
eggs hatch about 30 days later. Owl chicks have
baby down feathers. When they are about five or six
weeks old they will have adult feathers and will
leave the nest and hunt for their own
food. If
you wake in the night you may hear ruru calling,
"morepork, morepork". Weird
fact
&endash; the ruru eats its food whole &endash;
bones, feathers, everything! &endash; so later on
it will cough up a pellet containing
all that stuff. These pellets can often
be found on branches or fence posts. So you can see
what the ruru has been eating by pulling apart the
pellet!
Silvereye
Scientific
name: Zosterops lateralis 1st
prize, best ocean traveller "Weve
been blown out to sea in a storm. Its 1500
kilometres across the Tasman Sea. Ill never
make it. Im going to drown. Oh, theres
a ship down there. Ill land and have a rest.
Goodbye Australia. New Zealand here I
come!" More
than a hundred years ago, this is how silvereyes
came to New Zealand. They were tired out and
clinging to the ropes or crouched on the deck of
the sailing ships bringing settlers. Many
silvereyes arrived in Auckland, they nested, and
young birds spread throughout New Zealand. Because
they were newcomers to New Zealand, Maori called
the birds tauhou which means
little stranger. This
information was written in June 2001.
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