The New Zealand Herald

Bat wins Bird of the Year — by a long tail

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The official winner of Bird of the Year has been announced — and it’s not a bird.

The long-tailed bat beat all the feathered frontrunne­rs with a commanding lead, Forest and Bird spokeswoma­n Lissy FehnkerHea­ther told RNZ. The competitio­n saw the highest number of votes ever and the bat won by 3000.

Second place went to the ka¯ka¯po¯, the titipounam­u (rifleman) was third, the kea fourth and the toroa fifth. The black robin/kakaruia, korora¯, ruru, whio, and Rockhopper penguin made up the rest of the top 10.

Fehnker-Heather said bats are threatened by pests like possums, stoats, rats and cats and Bird of the Year was an opportunit­y to give them an unaccustom­ed moment in the sun.

“Bats are New Zealand’s only native land mammals, and they are classed as nationally critical, and they face a lot of the same threats that our native birds do,” she said.

“This year, we thought we’ll try and get more people aware of bats and the threats that they face. We thought we’ll include them in the Bird of the Year because there’s only two bats [species], so having bat of the year would not have been very exciting.”

Including the bat attracted controvers­y this year, and FehnkerHea­ther wasn’t against future competitio­ns throwing the metaphoric­al cat amongst the pigeons.

“It wouldn’t be Bird of the Year without some scandal, so we never know what will happen.”

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 ?? Photo / Dave Barker ?? The long-tailed bat was 3000 votes ahead of its closest competitor, the ka¯ka¯po, in Bird of the Year. The titipounam­u (rifleman) came third.
Photo / Dave Barker The long-tailed bat was 3000 votes ahead of its closest competitor, the ka¯ka¯po, in Bird of the Year. The titipounam­u (rifleman) came third.

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