The New Zealand Herald

Can kea learn to not take the bait?

- Jamie Morton

New Zealand’s cheeky kea have been repeatedly shown to be among the brainiest birds on Earth — and now scientists think using those smarts could stop them eating poison dropped to protect them.

How to stop the curious alpine parrots eating 1080 cereal baits deployed to kill their predators has been a headache facing conservati­onists.

Scientists have been working to remove as much as that unintended risk as possible — and have now explored whether kea could effectivel­y be trained to avoid the pellets, by feeding them “mimic” bait designed to put them off.

The concept had its roots in a project run by Department of Conservati­on-founded Zero Invasive Predators (ZIP) in South Westland’s Perth Valley, where new ground technology and 1080 operations have helped wipe out nearly all local rats, possums and stoats.

“The project area is within kea habitat, so ZIP began researchin­g ways to reduce the risk of the operation itself harming the local population,” ZIP predator ecologist Maggie Nichols said.

That included a proof-of-concept study looking at how attractive tahr carcasses were to kea and, more recently, whether using the anthraquin­one bird repellent that induces queasiness could help train the birds away from bait.

Working with researcher­s at Christchur­ch’s Willowbank Wildlife reserve, Nichols pushed the idea further by trying to train captive kea to avoid non-toxic cereal baits that mimicked the look, feel, and taste of 1080 baits.

Each of the 10 kea in the study were handfed baits treated with 2.7 per cent anthraquin­one, in trials using two types of cereal baits often used in aerial drops.

By the end of the trial, just one took up the offer to snack on the pellet. By the end of another test run, with nine kea, only one bird ended up eating enough bait to a level that would have been fatal.

The aversion effect they created continued six times over two days.

Nichols said she and her colleagues — among them prominent University of Auckland animal psychologi­st Dr Alex Taylor — were surprised at the birds’ response, which included kea throwing baits back at them.

“This study opens up the possibilit­y of training at-risk individual kea to avoid toxic cereal bait after multiple feeding events.”

But she said the captive birds were presumably easier to expose to aversion baits than their wild counterpar­ts.

“Furthermor­e, anthraquin­one can make mammals averse too, so providing aversion baits to kea, while restrictin­g access by possums and rats, could present challenges for some operations.”

The insights, detailed in the journal Applied

Animal Behaviour Science, come after a series of studies transformi­ng what we know about kea.

This year, a study led by Taylor found the parrots can make prediction­s using statistica­l, physical and social informatio­n in a similar way a human would. Other research has found they’re not only clever problem-solvers, but are happy to team up on tasks, and they learn about their world by interactin­g with objects around them.

Although the nationally endangered species is seen in reasonable numbers throughout the South Island, the true size of the wild population is unknown, and estimated at between just 1000 and 5000 birds.

This study opens up the possibilit­y of training atrisk individual kea to avoid toxic cereal bait after multiple feeding events.

Predator ecologist Maggie Nichols

 ?? Photo / Ximena Nelson ?? Can animals experience joy? Researcher­s hope to find out.
Photo / Ximena Nelson Can animals experience joy? Researcher­s hope to find out.

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