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Strigops habroptila

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Taxonomy [top]

Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family
ANIMALIA CHORDATA AVES PSITTACIFORMES PSITTACIDAE

Scientific Name: Strigops habroptila
Species Authority: Gray, 1845
Common Name/s:
English Kakapo, Owl Parrot
Spanish Cacapo

Assessment Information [top]

Red List Category & Criteria: Critically Endangered   A2be   ver 3.1
Year Published: 2010
Assessor/s: BirdLife International
Reviewer/s: Calvert, R., Symes, A., Butchart, S.
Contributor/s: Jansen, P., Moorhouse, R., Merton, D.
Justification:
This species only survives in a tiny population on four offshore islands and therefore qualifies as Critically Endangered. With the instigation of intensive management in 1995, numbers are now increasing, but the population trend over the last three generations has still been negative.

History:
2009 Critically Endangered
2008 Critically Endangered
2006 Critically Endangered
2004 Critically Endangered
2000 Critically Endangered
1996 Extinct in the Wild
1994 Extinct in the Wild

Geographic Range [top]

Range Description: Strigops habroptila formerly occurred throughout most of the North, South and Stewart Islands, New Zealand. Although it disappeared from most of its original range in the wake of human colonisation, the species remained abundant in Fiordland and some other higher-rainfall and more sparsely inhabited parts of South Island until the early twentieth century1. By 1976, however, the known population had been reduced to 18 birds, all males, all in Fiordland. In 1977, a rapidly declining population of c.150 birds was discovered on Stewart Island. Between 1980 and 1992, 61 remaining Stewart Island birds were transferred to offshore islands3,7,8,10, and are presently located on Codfish and Anchor Islands16. The last accepted North Island record was in 1927, the last South Island record of three males in Fiordland in 1987, and the last Stewart Island record of a female found and transferred to Codfish Island in 199717. In 2009 a male which was one of four transferred from Stewart to Codfish in 1987 was refound after having been missing for 21 years23. It is likely to be extinct in its natural range, and as of November 2005 birds were present on four islands: Codfish, Chalky, Anchor and Maud17. In 1999, 26 females and 36 males survived9, comprising 50 individuals of breeding age, six subadults and six juveniles. The population stabilised, and has begun to slowly increase3,4,10 following the implementation of intensive management3,9,10. By 2005, the kakapo population stood at 8613, of which 52 were breeding adults (21 females and 31 males) and 34 were juveniles12,13, and a productive breeding year in 2009 saw the total population increase to 124 birds24.

Countries:
Native:
New Zealand
Range Map: Click here to open the map viewer and explore range.

Population [top]

Population: In 2009, the total post-breeding population was 124 individuals (Merton 2009). However the number of mature individuals (sensu IUCN 2001) is likely to be much lower, with just 55 breeding adults in 2007.

Population Trend: Decreasing

Habitat and Ecology [top]

Habitat and Ecology: This large, flightless, nocturnal parrot feeds on leaves, stems, roots, fruit, nectar and seeds and prior to human colonisation it formerly inhabited a range of vegetation types throughout most of the North, South and Stewart Islands. It breeds once every two to five years, coinciding with periodic superabundant seeding or fruiting periods of key podocarp plant species: on Codfish, Stewart and Pearl Islands nesting has only occurred when rimu Dacrydium cupressinum or pink pine Halocarpus biformis fruit has been abundant18. Males cluster in traditional lekking sites and advertise their presence by calling each night for about three months, with mating occurring mainly between January and early March17. 1-4 eggs are laid, all parental care is performed by the female, and eggs and chicks are left unattended for several hours at night. Female kakapo take nine to 11 years to reach breeding age, and may live at least 90 years12. One productive male is at least 30 years old, and probably much older. Adult survivorship is now more than 99% per year1,2,3,5,8,9,10.

Systems: Terrestrial

Threats [top]

Major Threat(s): On Stewart Island, over 50% of monitored adults were killed each year by cats1. Abnormally low egg fertility and exceedingly low natural reproductive and recruitment rates are major concerns. In 2004, three juveniles died of septicaemia caused by the bacteria Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae (erysipelas), a disease which had not previously been reported in the species12.

Conservation Actions [top]

Conservation Actions: Conservation Actions Underway
CITES Appendix I and II. Supplementary feeding has increased the success of breeding attempts, and may be able to be used to trigger breeding: supplementary foods with low macronutrient:calcium ratios may be most effective in supporting increased reproduction3,10,19,21. All individuals are radio-tagged, and tracked throughout the year. Each nest is monitored continuously using infra-red video cameras, and heat pads are placed over eggs and nestlings while females forage. In 1998, the Polynesian rat Rattus exulans (a predator of eggs and nestlings) was eradicated from Codfish10. Extensive research is ongoing4,6. Methods of hand-rearing chicks are being refined. Reducing supplementary feeding levels has been shown to increase the percentage of female chicks produced and may redress the skewed gender balance11,15. Genetic diversity of the remaining population is managed to improve hatching rates14. Translocations have been carried out to take advantage of locally abundant food supplies and increase the frequency of breeding attempts14. Trials of artificial insemination methods have taken place20, and in 2009 a female which had been artificially inseminated laid two fertile eggs23. In 2008 seven chicks hatched on Codfish Island were transferred to specialised facilities to be hand-raised as rimu fruit failed to ripen22. A search for any remaining birds in Fiordland was completed in 2006 with no birds found and no evidence of their continued existence. A Kakapo Recovery Plan (the third since 1989), produced in partnership between the Department of Conservation, Forest & Bird and Rio Tinto Alcan (formerly Comalco), covers the period 2006-2015.

Conservation Actions Proposed
Continue research to identify key factors that limit breeding frequency and productivity, and address these urgently2. Maintain existing management practices that have facilitated a recent increase in the population.

Bibliography [top]

Anon. 2008. How to make a big-boned bird breed. New Scientist 199(2673): 16.

Anon. 2008. Kakapo set to breed. Forest and Bird: 3.

Anon. 2009. Long lost Kakapo rediscovered after 21 years. Available at: #http://www.wildlifeextra.com/go/news/kakapo-rediscovered.html#.

Clout, M.; Merton, D. 1998. Saving the Kakapo: the conservation of the world's most peculiar parrot. Bird Conservation International 8: 281-296.

Clout, M.N., Elliott, G.P. and Robertson, B.C. 2002. Effects of supplementary feeding on the offspring sex ratio of kakapo: a dilemma for the conservation of a polygynous parrot. Biological Conservation 107(1): 13-18.

Cresswell, M. 1996. Kakapo recovery plan 1996-2005. Department of Conservation, Wellington.

Harper, G. A.; Elliott, G. P.; Eason, D. K.; Moorhouse, R. J. 2006. What triggers nesting of Kakapo (Strigops habroptilus)? Notornis 53(1): 160-163.

Higgins, P. J. 1999. Handbook of Australian, New Zealand and Antarctic birds: parrots to dollarbirds. Oxford University Press, Oxford, U.K.

Hirschfeld, E. 2008. Rare Birds Yearbook 2009: the world's 190 most threatened birds. MagDig Media Ltd., Shrewsbury, UK.

Lloyd, B. D.; Powlesland, R. G. 1994. The decline of Kakapo Strigops habroptilus and attempts at conservation by translocation. Biological Conservation 69: 75-85.

Merton, D. 1997. Kakapo update. PsittaScene 9(1): 3-4.

Merton, D. 1998. Kakapo update.

Merton, D. 2009. Kakapo news. PsittaScene 21(3): 18.

Merton, D.; Clout, M. 1998. Red Data Bird: Kakapo Strigops habroptilus. World Birdwatch 20: 20-21.

Merton, D.; Clout, M. 1999. Kakapo: back from the brink. Wingspan 9(2): 14-17.

Merton, D.; Reed, C.; Crouchley, D. 1999. Recovery strategies and techniques for three free-living, critically-endangered New Zealand birds: Kakapo Strigops habroptilus, Black Stilt Himantopus novaezelandiae and Takahe Porphyrio mantelli. In: Roth, T.L.; Swanson, W.F.; Blattman, L.K. (ed.), Proceedings 7th world conference on breeding endangered species, pp. 151-162. Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden, Cincinnati.

Merton, D. V. 2006. The Kakapo: some highlights and lessons from five decades of applied conservation. Journal of Ornithology 147(5): 4.

Powlesland, R. G.; Merton, D. V.; Cockrem, J. F. 2006. A parrot apart: the natural history of the Kakapo (Strigops habroptila), and the context of its conservation management. Notornis 53(1): 3-26.

Raubenheimer, D.; Simpson, S. J. 2006. The challenge of supplementary feeding: can geometric analysis help save the Kakapo? Notornis 53(1): 100-111.

Robertson, H.A., Karika, I. and Saul, E.K. 2006. Translocation of Rarotonga monarchs Pomarea dimidiata within the Southern Cook Islands. Bird Conservation International 16(3): 197-215.

Citation: BirdLife International 2010. Strigops habroptila. In: IUCN 2011. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2011.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 21 May 2012.
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