The Post

Resurgent kaka ‘hammering’ gardens’ exotic trees

- MATT STEWART

ZEALANDIA’S neighbours are victims of the sanctuary’s success as its booming kaka numbers strip tree bark in their ceaseless search for sap, a study has found.

The Victoria University research shows Wellington’s Botanic Gardens are among the sites being targeted by the native parrots.

Gardens manager David Sole said the problem was serious and had spread city-wide, from Island Bay to Ngaio. ‘‘Some of our trees are getting an absolute hammering, to the extent that we’re going to have to cut them down.’’

Kaka were especially fond of the gardens’ stock of North American conifers, including decadesold heritage specimens.

Getting rid of exotic conifers and replacing them with more kaka-resistant natives was being considered. However, he would never call for a kaka cull.

‘‘Kaka were here long before people . . . We’re not going to go back to shooting them. We’ve just got to work it out.’’

Study author Kerry Charles said there were up to 250 kaka in Wellington city, a number that had grown quickly over recent years.

The study also found people welcomed the birds, and were willing to put up with superficia­l damage to trees, joinery, weatherboa­rds and guttering.

‘‘The vast majority of people absolutely love having kaka around, so they’re willing to toler- ate minor problems,’’ Ms Charles said. Even if kaka numbers proliferat­ed, they would never cause the same level of destructio­n as their mountain cousins, the kea.

Methods being developed for repelling the notoriousl­y inquisitiv­e kea could be used to curb kaka too, she said.

Her study recommends monitoring dangerous, damaged trees, keeping trees that kaka like for sap in safe feeding areas, and planting more damage-tolerant species on public and private land.

Homeowners are also advised not to feed kaka.

Australia’s destructiv­e native parrots showed how serious the problem could get if not handled properly, Ms Charles said in her report.

‘‘The Australian experience demonstrat­es the potential for intelligen­t parrots to generate serious and intractabl­e conflict in urban areas, and highlights the importance of understand­ing and managing urban wildlife issues proactivel­y.’’

 ??  ?? Bite worse than bark: A sap-feeding juvenile kaka caught in the act of gouging through the bark of a Eucalyptus leucoxylon in Wellington’s Botanic Gardens.
Bite worse than bark: A sap-feeding juvenile kaka caught in the act of gouging through the bark of a Eucalyptus leucoxylon in Wellington’s Botanic Gardens.
 ??  ?? Stripped: Botanic Gardens manager David Sole says some trees, such as the one above, are getting so damaged they will have to be cut down.
Stripped: Botanic Gardens manager David Sole says some trees, such as the one above, are getting so damaged they will have to be cut down.
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