Birds found at Awarua Bay
Introduction
Review a list of birds that can be found at Southland's Awarua Bay. More than 80 different species have been recorded.Wading birds
- White-faced Heron (Ardea novaehollandiae). Present in moderate numbers throughout the year. Regular mudflat feeder.
- South Island Pied Oystercatcher/torea (Haematopus ostralegus). Present throughout the year. Abundant in summer and autumn.
- Variable Oystercatcher/toreapango (H. unicolor). A few black phase birds generally present throughout the year.
- Hybrid Black/Pied Stilt (H.sp.). One record of two hybrid birds.
- Australasian Pied Stilt/poaka (Himanotopus himanotopus). Present in good numbers throughout the year.
- New Zealand Dotterel/tuturiwhatu (Charadrius obscurus). Breeds on Stewart Island. Up to 30% of the total southern population present in autumn and winter.
- Banded Dotterel (C. bicinctus). Breeds in small numbers. Large summer and autumn flocks.
- Mongolian Dotterel (C. mongolus). A single record of this species.
- Wrybill/ngutuparore (Anarhynchus frontalis). Occasionally recorded.
- Pacific Golden Plover (Pluvialis fulva). Breeds northeast Siberia and western Alaska. Regular summer visitor.
- Grey Plover (P. squatarola). Breeds northern Europe, Asia and America. Uncommon visitor to New Zealand. Two records from Awarua Bay. More frequently seen at the west end of Waituna Lagoon.
- Spur-winged Plover (Vanellus miles). A few usually present.
- Turnstone (Arenaria interpres). Breeds in northern Europe, Asia and America. Second most common migratory wader. Some birds over-winter each year.
- Lesser Knot/huahou (Calidris canutus). Breeds in arctic Eurasia. Regularly present in moderate numbers, some of winter most years.
- Sanderling (C. alba). Breeds northern Europe, Asia and America. Occasional summer visitor in low numbers. Seldom recorded elsewhere in Southland.
- Curlew Sandpiper (C. ferruginea). Breeds arctic Asia. Regular summer visitor in low numbers.
- Sharp-tailed Sandpiper (C. acuminata). Breeds northeast Siberia. Regular summer visitor in low numbers.
- Pectoral Sandpiper (C. melanotus). One record of a single bird.
- Red-necked Stint (C. ruficollis). Breeds northeast Siberia and northwest Alaska. Occasional summer visitor in moderate numbers.
- Eastern Broad-billed Sandpiper (Limicola falcinellus). Breeds arctic Europe and Asia Rare visitor to New Zealand. One record from Awarua Bay.
- Eastern Curlew (Numenius madagascariensis). Breeds northeast Asia. Occasional summer visitor in low numbers.
- Asiatic Whimbrel (N. phaeopus variegata). Breeds northeast Asia. One record of two birds.
- American Whimbrel (N. p. hudsonicus). Breeds northern Canada and Alaska, migrating to Central and South America. Occasionally strays to New Zealand. A very rare summer visitor.
- Eastern Bar-tailed Godwit/kūaka (Limosa lapponica). Breeds eastern Siberia and north Alaska. Most abundant of the migratory waders. Some birds over-winter each year.
- Hudsonian Godwit (L. haemastica). Breeds northwest Canada and Alaska. One record of two birds.
- Siberian (Grey-tailed) Tattler (Tringa brevipes). Breeds northern Asia. Regular summer visitor in low numbers (up to 5). Seldom recorded elsewhere in Southland. Has been known to over-winter.
- Greenshank (T. nebularia). Breeds subarctic Eurasia. Occasional summer visitor seldom recorded elsewhere in Southland.
- Marsh Sandpiper (T. stagnatilis). Breeds eastern Europe to Mongolia. Confirmed sighting in November 1984 was first in Southland.
- Terek Sandpiper (T. terek). Breeds northern Europe and Asia. Rare summer visitor in low numbers.
Waterfowl
- Black Swan (Cygnus atratus). Regularly present but numbers fluctuate seasonally.
- Mallard (Anas platyrhynchus). Present in high numbers throughout the year.
- Grey Duck/parera (A. superciliosa). Occasionally present in low numbers.
Grey Teal/tete (A. gracilis). A nomadic species periodically recorded in low numbers. - New Zealand Shoveler/kuruwhengu) (A.rhynchotis). Present in moderate numbers.
- Sooty Shearwater/tītī) (Puffinus griseus). Occasionally seen feeding near head of the bay.
Other species
- Black shag/kōau (Phalacrocorax carbo). Present throughout the year in moderate numbers. Breeds in Waituna wetlands.
- Little shag/kawaupaka (P. melanoleucos). Abundant throughout year. Breeds in Awarua and Waituna swamps.
- Stewart Island shag (Leucocarbo chalconotus). Present in good numbers throughout the year. Breeds in Bluff Harbour.
- Australasian bittern/matuku-hūrepo (Botaurus poiciloptilus). Solitary birds recorded in marginal vegetation, especially on Tiwai Peninsula.
- Spotless Crake/puweto (Porzana tabuensis). Recorded in marginal vegetation at head of bay. Rare in Southland.
- Marsh Crake (P. pusilla). Present in low numbers in marginal vegetation.
- Gull-billed Tern (Gelochelidon nilotica). Breeds Northern Hemisphere and Australia. Rare visitor. At least two records from bay.
- Caspian Tern/taranui (Hydroprogne caspia). Present in low numbers. Has bred at some sites about the bay.
- Black-fronted Tern/tarapiroe (Sterna albostriata). Present in low numbers, especially in mid-summer and autumn.
- White-fronted Tern/tara (S. striata). Resident. Formerly bred on spit by causeway but now largely displaced by black-backed gulls.
- Eastern Little Tern (S. albifrons). Breeds eastern Asia. Rare visitor.
- South Island Fernbird/mātāa (Bowdleria punctata). Resident and breeding in marginal vegetation at head of bay and on Tiwai peninsula.
- Southern black-backed gull/karoro (Larus dominicanus). Present throughout the year in high numbers. Breeding colony on spit by causeway.
- Red-billed gull/tarapunga (L. novaehollandiae). Present throughout the year in moderate numbers. Odd pairs known to breed on spit by causeway.
Related link
The Arawai Kakariki programme - working to restore the Waituna Lagoon/Awarua wetland complex