Marlborough Express - Weekend Express

Volunteers step up to feed endangered seabirds

- DAVID HILL This is Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air.

‘‘They can lose 15g a day, so if they don’t get food for six days they can lose up to half their body weight.’’

‘‘Sardine smoothies’’ have been on the menu for Kaikōura’s endangered Hutton’s shearwater birds (tītī) this season.

A lack of food has seen volunteers supplement feeding chicks at Te Rae o Atiu colony on Kaikōura Peninsula to give them the best chance at survival.

Hutton’s Shearwater Charitable Trust chairperso­n Ted Howard said this season has been the most successful for breeding in the peninsula colony, with 27 chicks hatching.

But global warming is taking its toll, with rising ocean temperatur­es forcing krill, the birds’ staple diet, to go deeper for cooler temperatur­es, Howard said.

The ongoing concerns for Kaikōura’s seabirds come amid calls for Environmen­t Canterbury review the Canterbury Regional Coastal Environmen­t Plan, which was adopted in 2005.

Howard said there was a two week period this season where the adult tītī were unable to bring back enough food to feed their chicks. ‘‘They can lose 15g a day, so if they don’t get food for six days they can lose up to half their body weight.’’

The birds are weighed every three to four days and if they lose a quarter of their body weight, they are supplement fed.

He described the ‘‘sardine smoothies’’ as having ‘‘a rather distinctiv­e odour’’.

The chicks are meant to put on weight up to 600g before attempting to fly and heading out to sea during March and April.

Howard said typically around 40 percent of the chicks returned to the colony after three or four years for breeding.

Global warming is just one of threats to the endangered Kaikōura tītī, which was once an important source of mahinga kai for Ngāti Kurī. Threats include birds

Ted Howard, Hutton’s Shearwater Charitable Trust

crash landing due to street lighting, getting caught in nets, plastic pollution and predators such as cats, dogs, stoats and wild pigs.

It is thought there were 10 wild colonies in 1900 and eight in 1965, but now there are just two in the Seaward Kaikōura Ranges.

Last season just two chicks survived in the Kowhai colony due to the wet conditions, but Howard is hoping for more success after half of the eggs hatched this season.

Te Rae o Atiu colony is a partnershi­p between Tukete Charitable Trust, which owns the land, local rūnanga, the Hutton’s Shearwater Charitable Trust and the Department of Conservati­on.

It was establishe­d nearly 20 years ago by translocat­ing chicks from the wild.

Howard’s wife Ailsa McGilvary-Howard has been monitoring banded dotterel

nests at Kaikōura for more than a decade.

The dotterel are territoria­l and their nests more isolated, compared to the shearwater­s which are ‘‘colonial nesters’’.

This leaves them more prone to cats, rats and hedgehogs.

‘‘Our trapping is working, but we need to get cats under control,’’ Howard said.

 ?? SABRINA LUECHT ?? Hutton’s shearwater birds (tītī) are endemic to Kaikōura.
SABRINA LUECHT Hutton’s shearwater birds (tītī) are endemic to Kaikōura.

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