The New Zealand Herald

Bird count shows kereru in force in south

- — NZ Newswire

Dunedin has been identified as a new kereru “hotspot” in this year’s Great Kereru Count.

The annual 10-day count, the country’s biggest “citizen science project”, finished on Sunday and organisers said there were nearly 6000 observatio­ns of 13,573 wood pigeons.

The final figures will be known on Friday but some trends can already be seen.

Most sightings were recorded in Wellington, Auckland, Nelson/Tasman and Dunedin.

“A new kereru hotspot this year is Dunedin, which is exciting,” a WWF New Zealand spokeswoma­n said.

Good numbers were also seen at Waiheke Island, Whangarei, Taranaki, Bay of Plenty, New Plymouth, Palmerston North, the West Coast and Christchur­ch. There were 122 observatio­ns of flocks of 10 or more.

Numbers were up on last year, but lower than in 2015. However, organisers are not worried by fluctuatio­ns in the count, which started in 2014.

“To get a clear picture of how kereru are doing, scientists from Victoria University of Wellington require at least seven to 10 years’ worth of solid data to analyse,” the spokeswoma­n said.

“Observatio­ns may fluctu- ate a little from year to year but it’s the overall picture we are looking for. Over time, we hope to discover whether numbers are increasing or decreasing and whether population­s are faring better or worse in some parts ... ” Kereru are not considered endangered but are important for forests and kereru count organisers want to build a picture of how they’re doing nationally. The count is a partnershi­p between WWF New Zealand, Kereru Discovery, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington City Council, and NatureWatc­h NZ.

 ??  ?? Scientists need years of data to know how kereru are doing.
Scientists need years of data to know how kereru are doing.

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