The Post

A quest to crack kakapo problem

- andrea.vance@stuff.co.nz Andrea Vance

It’s a science problem that’s less chicken – more parrot – and egg.

With a global population of just under 150, ka¯ka¯po¯ eggs are precious. But only around half will go on to hatch into one of the endearing, flightless parrots.

Hatching failure is more common in endangered birds. As the population further dwindles, inbreeding becomes more common – and the lack of genetic diversity leads to even fewer ka¯ ka¯ po¯ clutches hatching.

But now, in an almost $1 million programme, Otago University scientist Bruce Robertson hopes to break the destructiv­e cycle by unlocking their DNA.

‘‘They are amazing, very charismati­c. If you’ve met a kakapo, you just sort of fall in love with them,’’ Robertson said.

He’s been studying the mossgreen feathered birds, which have owl-like faces, for 23 years. ‘‘You have to worry because once you get down to those sorts of numbers it is not just a genetic problem. There could be a catastroph­e – a disease or something could wipe them all out.

‘‘It is very precarious the situation they are in, so anything we can do to try and assist the recovery programme and potentiall­y increase their numbers has to be a good thing.’’

It’s a grim task, but Robertson will analyse dead embryos transporte­d back from the Ka¯ka¯po¯ Recovery programme on three predator-free islands.

He’ll work alongside the conservati­on genetics team from San Diego Zoo, which breed the ‘alala, or Hawaiian crow. It’s now extinct in the wild and there are only 114 left in captivity, with a hatching failure of 60 per cent.

They will compare the genomic architectu­re of eggs that have hatched and those that have failed, using whole genome sequences. And it’s hoped the research will lead to new breeding strategies to boost the chicks’ chance of survival.

‘‘We know in a lot of species of endangered birds that they show inbreeding depression, so when there are small numbers of them and they start mating with relatives you end up getting this poor hatching success,’’ Robertson explained.

‘‘The plan is to try and identify if there are certain genes that are involved. It might just be one gene, or 1-2 genes involved, but it also might be that there are a whole bunch of little genes and it is a cumulative effect.

‘‘Once we have figured that out, we then want to put in place breeding strategies which will then, hopefully, mitigate that effect and then we’ll see more eggs hatching.’’

Robertson received a $933,000 grant from the Royal Society’s Marsden Fund to carry out the work. The molecular ecologist has also worked on an ambitious programme to sequence the gengomes of all living adult ka¯ ka¯ po¯ .

The ‘‘night parrot’’ population was abundant in New Zealand for thousands of years but the arrival of European settlers and their predators almost wiped them out.

 ??  ?? There are just under 150 ka¯ka¯po¯ left on three remote islands off New Zealand.
There are just under 150 ka¯ka¯po¯ left on three remote islands off New Zealand.
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