Kākāpō population at its highest in almost 50 years

8:25 pm on 19 July 2022

Kākāpō conservation efforts are paying dividends with the population reaching its highest level since records began in the 1970s.

When kakapo chicks reach 150 days old they graduate to being juveniles. They won't be counted as adults until they are four and a half years old.

A juvenile kākāpō. Photo: RNZ / Alison Ballance

Science adviser at the kākāpō recovery programme Dr Andrew Digby said it had been the second biggest breeding season on record with 60 chicks hatched, although five did not survive to become juveniles.

The population has now reached 216 birds.

He said it was especially impressive given the restrictions they were working under during the pandemic and there might be a few more chicks still to come.

A major obstacle was trying to find predator-free places for all of them with sites in the North Island and islands in Fiordland being looked at.

The kākāpō chicks Alice-2-A and Tumeke-2-A have recently fledged but still sometimes return to visit the nest of their foster mother, Queenie.

Photo: Andrew Digby / DOC

Genetic diversity was an issue also and the genome of all the kākāpō has been sequenced since 2015.

The fatherhood of each chick was a focus of the programme, Dr Digby said.

"That work is ongoing so we've got this amazing resource that's all the genetic information for all of the kākāpō and we're working with a lot of geneticists on that to try and understand just what the genetics means for the species - how does it affect their fertility, disease, that sort of thing."

Kākāpō are currently found on three islands. Whenua Hou / Codfish Island, near Stewart island. Pukenui / Anchor Island in Fiordland. And Hauturu / Little Barrier Island in the Hauraki Gulf.

Photo: Jake Osborne

It was a problem that a few of the males dominated the mating and sometimes a successful male would be shipped off an island to another location if he had fathered too many chicks.

The ultimate goal was to leave kākāpō to fend for themselves and a successful breeding season has meant they could step back from intensive management on some breeding islands.

"It's worked very well, we were able to produce three chicks from there and they're still alive. So that's the way we're going; we need to let them do their own thing a bit more."

Listen to RNZ's eight-part season covering the 2019 kākāpō breeding season.

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