Weekend Herald

Birthday bird

Rock star parrot vanishes days before his 20th. By Russell Blackstock

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New Zealand’s best known bird, Sirocco the kakapo, turns 20 this week — though he may not make it to his own birthday party. Find out why his handlers aren’t worried as we pay tribute to the bird that went global for that famous mating incident on Stephen Fry’s BBC series.

ew Zealand’s best- known bird turns 20 this week — but he has vanished. Sirocco the kakapo may not even make it to his own birthday party on Thursday. He has slipped out of his electronic monitoring bracelet and disappeare­d on a remote island off Fiordland where he still lives, mostly in the wild.

But his handlers aren’t too worried.

Sirocco has done it before — and the bold boy is expected to show up again during kakapo mating season towards the end of the year.

Deidre Vercoe, operations manager for the Department of Conservati­on’s kakapo and takahe team, has known our feathered friend since he was a 3- month- old chick.

She insists her beloved Sirocco is simply playing a game of hide and seek.

“I’m afraid he’s gone to ground at the moment, so we won’t be able to celebrate his 20th birthday with him,” she says. “His transmitte­r seems to have failed and we have no idea where he is.

“But when his hormone levels increase next summer and the mating season is underway, he will show up. That is when he seeks people out, because he much prefers human company to that of the other kakapo.”

Sirocco has captivated fans from around the world since shooting to fame on YouTube.

A video clip of the then 12- year- old bird hopping on to the head of a zoologist at Codfish Island and trying to mate with him has attracted more than 7 million views.

Sirocco became an instant TV superstar when BBC presenter Stephen Fry then uttered the phrase: “Sorry, but this is one of the funniest things I have ever seen. You are being shagged by a rare parrot.”

Sirocco has since thrilled tens of thousands of Kiwi fans during popular live appearance­s while on “tour” around New Zealand. He jets around the country like a rock star in a customised travel box that is strapped into a window seat on the plane, so he can look out.

He also has his own Facebook and Twitter pages, which are followed hundreds of thousands of people.

And Sirocco is also the only bird with a government job. In 2010 he was made official spokesbird for conservati­on by Prime Minister John Key and even visited the Beehive to meet and greet the politician­s.

Key was impressed with Sirocco’s performanc­e.

“He’s a very media- savvy bird, he’s got a worldwide fan base — they hang on every squawk that comes out of his beak,” he said.

“He’ll be a great official spokesbird and a great ambassador for New Zealand.”

Sirocco’s love affair with people started after he was hand- reared as a chick following a respirator­y illness.

Since then he has refused to mate with other kakapo and considers humans his natural partners.

When breeding season arrives each summer, other male kakapo mobilise a “track and bowl” system to attract females.

Not Sirocco however — he prefers human women.

“When kakapo breeding season is on, the other male birds dig a hole in the ground and make a loud booming noise to attract a mate,” Vercoe says. “But Sirocco heads straight for the DoC huts as he knows people will be there.

“His favourite trick is to make a track and bowl on the ground between the hut and the long drop outside toilets as that is the busiest place at night. It gives you quite a fright when you are going to the loo in the dark and you suddenly find a frisky, 3kg parrot climbing up your leg.

“In the past when we have tried to release him to the wild we have put him in a bag and dropped him off somewhere remote on his island, but several times he made it back to our hut before we did, so we just gave up on that.”

Kakapo, which are nocturnal and flightless, have inhabited New Zealand for thousands of years but, with the arrival of humans and introduced predators, their numbers rapidly declined. By the 1970s only 18 kakapo were known to exist — all in Fiordland and all males. The species seemed doomed to extinction.

But in 1977, a population of male and female kakapo was discovered on Stewart Island, giving new hope for the survival of this precious bird.

Since then, a small team of dedicated staff from DoC have worked tirelessly to protect, manage and grow the kakapo population.

They have been supported by volunteers throughout the country and, increasing­ly overseas, who provide extra support — by nest- minding and supplement­ary feeding — during the precious breeding seasons.

Today there are kakapo breeding

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 ??  ?? Sirocco meets ministers Maggie Barry and Nick Smith at the Beehive in 2014; the famous “mating” incident during filming of a Stephen Fry BBC TV series.
Sirocco meets ministers Maggie Barry and Nick Smith at the Beehive in 2014; the famous “mating” incident during filming of a Stephen Fry BBC TV series.
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 ?? Pictures / DoC, supplied ?? Sirocco at 14 days old and weighing 185g. Right, Deidre Vercoe from Kakapo Recovery, has known Sirocco since he was a 3- month- old.
Pictures / DoC, supplied Sirocco at 14 days old and weighing 185g. Right, Deidre Vercoe from Kakapo Recovery, has known Sirocco since he was a 3- month- old.
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