Kākāpō Sinbad feeds at a smart hopper
Image: Jake Osborne | Creative Commons

Introduction

We manage kākāpō to ensure they are healthy and ready for breeding.

Our regular kākāpō recovery work includes tracking with radio telemetry, putting out supplementary food and monitoring for pests. During breeding seasons, we monitor and manage kākāpō nests and sometimes hand rear chicks.

Adult kākāpō are solitary and reclusive. We handle them at least once a year for a health check and transmitter change. The rest of the time, we leave them to live as naturally as possible.

Intensive monitoring

Daryl Eason uses radio telemetry to track kākāpō.
Daryl Eason tracks kākāpō with radio telemetry
Image: Bronwyn Jeynes | DOC

Transmitter tracking

Every kākāpō wears a smart transmitter that emits a signal packed with behavioural data. We scramble over the islands, tracking the signals to collect the data and monitor the birds' locations.

We also collect data from automated tracking stations on the islands, and occasionally during a special flyover.

Nest monitoring

During breeding seasons, we set up nest kits close to each active nest.

Some nest kits are automated and send data to us via satellite or VHF radio. Others are monitored every night by a rostered nest minder. 

Regular health checks

About once a year, we give each kākāpō a hands-on health check.

We locate the bird using radio telemetry, then we:

  • replace its radio transmitter with a fresh one
  • weigh it
  • check its moulting condition
  • take blood samples
  • check for parasites
  • note any signs of injury or illness
  • sometimes take its temperature.

We load the information into a national database. It allows us to track the life history of each kākāpō, and build a clearer picture of the species.

We check young birds at one to five day intervals as they develop in the nest. After they fledge, we check them every two to six weeks for a further five months, then at three-monthly intervals until they are two. Young birds are more likely to have problems while they learn about life in the wild.

Predator control

Kākāpō live safely on islands free from predators such as cats, dogs, possums, ferrets, stoats and rats. We constantly safeguard the islands from the ongoing threat of predator invasion.

Anchor Island is within swimming distance of the mainland for stoats. We maintain and monitor a network of stoat traps on the island and surrounding islets.

Codfish Island/Whenua Hou and Te Hauturu-o-Toi/Little Barrier Island are not prone to stoat invasion, but were previously home to kiore/Pacific rat. DOC eradicated kiore from Whenua Hou in 1998 and Te Hauturu-o-Toi in 2004. We maintain trap networks on both islands, along with various detection tools to help keep them predator free.

Everything that travels to the island must undergo a quarantine process. Clothing, food, gear and even helicopters are all disinfected and checked by trained staff to ensure there are no mice, insects, seeds or dirt in them. 

Supplementary feeding

Most years, we give kākāpō specially formulated food during spring and summer. Supplementary feeding ensures that kākāpō are healthy enough to breed and raise chicks.

Staff and volunteers walk the islands every three or four days, topping up feeding stations and monitoring how much each bird has eaten. Backpacks can weigh up to 20 kg at the start of each day, and the long routes often require travel over steep terrain in demanding conditions.

Artificial incubation and hand rearing

Kākāpō chick being fed as part of hand rearing.
A hand-reared kākāpō chick receives food from its minder
Image: Jake Osborne | DOC

Sometimes, a kākāpō mother has too many chicks to raise successfully herself, or a chick is sick or underweight. In such cases, we remove the chicks and care for them ourselves.

Occasionally, we reduce the number of chicks a mother will have to deal with by removing eggs. We artificially incubate the eggs, mimicking the temperature and humidity of a kākāpō nest. It requires round-the-clock care and specialist skills.

When a chick needs to be hand reared, we keep it with other chicks and return it to the wild when it's four months old. This avoids negative imprinting, where a bird identifies with humans and might not mate with its own species.

Impact on the population

We’ve hand reared 69 kākāpō and returned them to the wild, with a survival rate of 100% one year post release. At the start of 2018, hand-reared birds comprised 41% of the kākāpō population. They would likely have died without rescue. Most are now indistinguishable from wild birds.

In 2016, 16 of our hand-reared female kākāpō nested. Eleven of the females – all first-time mothers – fledged healthy chicks.

Reducing the need for hand rearing

Nest management and supplementary feeding has allowed us to reduce the need for hand rearing.

To make sure chicks are reared as naturally as possible, we:

  • give a fertile egg or chick to a mother with infertile or artificial eggs
  • swap a healthy, hand-reared chick with a slow-growing or sick chick of similar age
  • hand feed chicks in the nest for the first four days if the mother is slow to start.

Mother kākāpō are very accepting of these changes and seem happy to accept new chicks.

Rimu crop failures

In the 2009 season, 26 out of 33 chicks needed to be hand reared when the rimu crop failed. 

One of the main aims of our supplementary feeding trials is to produce a pellet diet that mothers will feed their young when the rimu crop fails.

Back to top