Sunday Star-Times

Meet sticky-beak... NZ's tooled-up kea

- By SARAH-JANE O’CONNOR

CRAFTY KEA have once again proven their status as New Zealand’s smartest birds, this time being caught on camera using sticks to set off stoat traps. The puzzle started in Fiordland, where rangers noticed wooden stoat traps had been triggered, often with sticks left behind.

Mat Goodman, 23, picked up the mystery while working with a documentar­y team in Fiordland and wound up investigat­ing further as his final project for a University of Canterbury degree. ‘‘ It was obvious it was kea really, but nobody had seen it happen.’’ So he set out to catch the culprits in action using motion- activated cameras. But the alpine parrots did not take kindly to surveillan­ce. ‘‘ I had about four cameras that were ripped to bits by kea,’’ Goodman said.

By trial and error Goodman found a setup that enabled his camera to survive several weeks until he could return to rescue it.

It was that camera which caught the incriminat­ing evidence. Over two hours, what appeared to be a single bird ‘‘meddled’’ with a stoat trap, collecting and testing sticks until it found one that set the trap off. Goodman said it appeared the bird was ‘‘whittling’’ sticks to make them the right size, pulling off any twigs before testing them.

If a stick did not work, the bird tossed it away in a manner that seemed remarkably like frustratio­n.

‘It’s probably very frustratin­g for DOC,’’ Goodman said. Particular­ly as it appeared the only reward the birds got was ‘‘a very loud bang’’.

But Goodman thought the annoyance was worth it for the crafty birds which he said were an ‘‘asset to New Zealand’’.

 ??  ??
 ?? Supplied/Mat Goodman. ?? In screenshot­s from camera footage, a kea in Fiordland tests sticks for setting off a stoat trap.
Supplied/Mat Goodman. In screenshot­s from camera footage, a kea in Fiordland tests sticks for setting off a stoat trap.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand