Otago Daily Times

Karearea monitoring project taking off

- Kerrie.waterworth@odt.co.nz

EWAN Mackie could barely contain his excitement. The Cardrona Alpine Resort head of operations had spent the day tracking a karearea with Cardrona Karearea Conservati­on Project scientific adviser Graham Parker, of Parker Conservati­on.

‘‘We think we have discovered a new nest site. We think we have actually pinned down exactly where it is.’’

Ewan Mackie came to New Zealand from Scotland in 2008.

Working at Cardrona Alpine Resort, he had watched the karearea in the skies above the resort for many years, particular­ly in summer.

He had always had a passion for wildlife and the environmen­t, but when he got talking to locals, he found out not much was known about New Zealand’s only native falcon.

‘‘There was no central knowledge of how many karearea there were, what the

birds were doing, what worked for them, were they at risk or were they fine?’’

Mr Mackie raised more than $40,000 through a Birds of a Feather ball last year to establish what he hoped would be a five to tenyear project gathering data on the birds’ breeding population and habitat, and the size of their territory in the valley.

He approached Mr Parker to carry out the field work.

Mr Parker had been studying birds for the past 20 years and said quite a bit was known about karearea in plantation forests, but there was almost no data on them in the high country.

Often known as sparrow hawks, the karearea had a territory of about 20sq km but there could be some overlap in the Cardrona Valley because there was so much food, he said.

Possums, stoats, feral cats and wild pigs were the greatest threat to the survival of their young, but the adults risked being shot if they attacked domestic chickens and electrocut­ed by old infrastruc­ture such as transforme­rs.

‘‘Eight hundred years ago the karearea’s only predators were avian, but once you have mammalian predators that use their nose to seek out food the karearea are doing everything wrong,’’ Mr Parker said.

Karearea made a nest on a scrape on the ground, returned to the same site every year and usually had one clutch of eggs a year.

‘‘Once the eggs hatch and the parents start bringing food to the nest, the chicks also become smelly so there are a lot of signs for mammals to follow,’’ Mr Parker said.

Three confirmed nests were monitored with cameras last year, and one pair of karearea was found to have abandoned their nest after possums visited every day.

In the second year of the project, Mr Parker was hoping to monitor up to six or seven breeding pairs, as six farms had given the project full access, another one ‘‘was almost on board’’ and many small landholder­s had also given permission to go on to their properties.

‘‘It is all about community engagement’’, he told locals who had gathered to hear him speak at the launch of the second year of the project at the Cardrona Hotel recently.

‘‘Your eyes and ears were really important,’’ he said.

Karearea were very defensive of their nests and would probably divebomb anyone who was in close proximity.

‘‘If that is happening, then you can save us days or even up to a week of trying to find

the nest,’’

Mr Parker said.

An oxidised steel sculpture of a karearea mounted in the car park of the hotel was officially unveiled at the project launch.

Wanaka artist Simon Max Bannister, who made it to raise public awareness of the project, said he had wanted to make a sculpture that could be inhabited and represent an apex predator at the same time.

‘‘I like to create pieces that speak for the landscape and I hope this one does.

‘‘You can’t protect an apex predator without protecting its prey species and you can’t protect the prey species without looking after the land, the water and the plants,’’ Mr Bannister said.

A pair of starlings had already taken up residence inside sculpture.

A customer at the hotel reportedly told bar staff how ‘‘surprising­ly small the falcons were nesting inside’’.

 ?? PHOTO: KERRIE WATERWORTH ?? Karearea facts . . . Ornitholog­ist Graham Parker, of Parker Conservati­on in Dunedin, explains to Cardrona Valley residents the habits and sounds of the karearea at the Cardrona Hotel at the start of the second year of the project.
PHOTO: KERRIE WATERWORTH Karearea facts . . . Ornitholog­ist Graham Parker, of Parker Conservati­on in Dunedin, explains to Cardrona Valley residents the habits and sounds of the karearea at the Cardrona Hotel at the start of the second year of the project.
 ??  ?? Karearea sculpture already home to birds . . . Starlings have taken up residence in the oxidised steel sculpture by Simon Max Bannister erected in the Cardrona Hotel car park recently to raise awareness of the apex predator.
Caught on camera . . . This possum visited every night until the parents finally abandoned the nest.
Karearea sculpture already home to birds . . . Starlings have taken up residence in the oxidised steel sculpture by Simon Max Bannister erected in the Cardrona Hotel car park recently to raise awareness of the apex predator. Caught on camera . . . This possum visited every night until the parents finally abandoned the nest.
 ?? PHOTO: ROSS CURTIS ?? Flying high . . . A karearea in the skies above Cardrona Valley.
PHOTO: ROSS CURTIS Flying high . . . A karearea in the skies above Cardrona Valley.
 ?? PHOTO: PARKER CONSERVATI­ON ??
PHOTO: PARKER CONSERVATI­ON

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