Taupo & Turangi Herald

Go on a duck hunt with a difference

Keep your eyes open on school holidays treasure trail

- Milly Fullick

There are only 3000 of them in the world, but if you want to see them, you might only need to take a few steps from central Tūrangi. Whio, or blue ducks, are unique to New Zealand, usually being found only in remote areas; the Department of Conservati­on’s (DoC) website calls them “an iconic back-country species”.

However, there is a thriving population in the Tongariro River at Tū rangi, with many often visible from the Tongariro River Trail that winds along the awa’s banks.

With Love Taupō ’s school holiday biking treasure trail in full swing along the route, now is a great time for families to hunt the blue ducks — although these ones are strictly just for looking at.

The easiest kind to find are of the wooden variety, stuck to trees along the banks for kids to seek, with a letter on each unscrambli­ng to form a potentiall­y prize-winning answer.

For a challenge, families can try to spot the real thing, either swimming in the river or chilling out on its banks.

Department of Conservati­on senior biodiversi­ty ranger Sarah Tunnicliff­e said they are fascinatin­g animals that not many people know about, in part because they can be hard to spot.

“I think people don’t realise that they’re there.

“They’re pretty well-camouflage­d

unless you know what you’re looking for.

“If people are looking out on to the river and see the rocks, sometimes you notice the rocks actually have beaks and wings!”

Tunnicliff­e’s expert advice for spotting the rare birds is to begin by listening for their unusual call.

“They sound very different; they don’t quack, they whistle or growl.

“Listening out for them when you’re on the river is probably one of your first signs.”

The next step involves patience, she said.

“Then, keep your eyes open. Sometimes they’re low-flying, coming into the river — they can be bobbing around on the rapids, and if you look on the river rocks in the river you might find some.

“Once you get your eye in, you can spot them.”

Although not the flashiest looking duck, they have some features that make them unlike any other, including a whistling call, a rubbery beak and a love of whitewater unmatched by any rafter.

Their rock-imitation act serves as a handy adaptation when the ducks’

biggest threat come from above, she said.

Before humans arrived in New Zealand, bringing with them mammals which today threaten the whio, it was the now-extinct Haast’s eagle they had to worry about.

“Even though they evolved to be well-camouflage­d from the air, if you were a Haast’s eagle, you wouldn’t see them because they look like stones, but ground predators hunt by smell, and they’re pretty smelly.”

Today, the whio is classed as a threatened/nationally vulnerable animal by DoC, with their main threats being introduced predators, habitat loss and climate change.

In Tūrangi, the main problem facing them is stoats, which take eggs, chicks and even adult ducks when they are moulting, nesting or otherwise vulnerable.

The problem is so severe that currently, they would be unlikely to survive without human interventi­on.

“They’re also what we call conservati­on-dependent, which means they need help with predator trapping to survive.”

“The more trapping that can be done along river corridors, the better for the ducks.

“We’re lucky that we have a few community groups around here doing the trapping, which is really cool.”

Whio are only found in fastflowin­g rivers, in which they swim against the current to catch their prey; small, freshwater creatures that often need to be pried off rocks with their beaks, which is where the rubber-like covering over their beaks comes in handy.

It might take some perseveran­ce to spot them, but the opportunit­y to see the whio so close to town is well worth it, she said.

“A friend of mine calls these the ‘suburban whio’. Nowhere else can you see them from State Highway 1, if you know what you’re looking for.

“They’re definitely not your average duck.”

Love Taupō’s Taupō Treasure Trails are on from now until April 28 in Taupō, Tūrangi and Mangakino, with mystery prizes up for grabs. See Love Taupō’s website for details.

For more informatio­n on whio, including a recording of their whistling call, see DoC’s website.

 ?? Photo / Department of Conservati­on ?? Whio can be seen more easily in Tū rangi than perhaps any other town in New Zealand.
Photo / Department of Conservati­on Whio can be seen more easily in Tū rangi than perhaps any other town in New Zealand.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand