Otago Daily Times

Aerial clash sidelines hawk

- JOHN GIBB

IT’S not only in the Football World Cup semifinals that the usual pecking order is upended — a recent clash between a harrier hawk and a tui ended 10 to the tui.

During a recent knockout encounter between the Australasi­an harrier, or kahu, and the tui at Taieri Mouth, there was no need for instant replays, penalty shootouts or yellow cards.

As a nearby resident watched, the harrier was soaring in midair when ‘‘out of the blue, a tui charged him’’ and ‘‘slammed into the harrier so hard’’ it broke its wing, Dunedin Wildlife Hospital veterinary surgeon Dr Lisa Argilla said.

After the predator ‘‘just suddenly dropped out of the sky’’, the resident looked after the injured bird overnight on June 29, and contacted the Department of Conservati­on, which contacted the wildlife hospital at Otago Polytechni­c.

‘‘Luckily the fracture should heal well with just a bandage to stabilise it,’’ Dr Argilla said.

The harrier was ‘‘enjoying great food and pain killers’’ and spending some time in hospital ‘‘to think about the story he wants to tell his family when he is released’’.

Tuis could be aggressive in protecting their territory, she said.

Hospital veterinary nurse Angelina Martelli said the hawk would spend another three weeks in hospital before rehabilita­ting at Oxford Bird Rescue, northwest of Christchur­ch, and being released into the wild.

 ?? PHOTOS: GREGOR RICHARDSON ?? Wrapping a raptor . . . The injured harrier hawk at the Dunedin Wildlife Hospital.
PHOTOS: GREGOR RICHARDSON Wrapping a raptor . . . The injured harrier hawk at the Dunedin Wildlife Hospital.
 ??  ?? The fallout . . . The injured hawk’s right wing.
The fallout . . . The injured hawk’s right wing.

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