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Hello

 

In January, it will be five years since we launched our search campaign and the $10,000 reward and we have received nearly 300 reports of possible encounters since then.  Occasionally, and in fact more often, we are being sent videos, often capturing an unusual bird song and, now and then, an actual bird.  These are hugely useful as they can be shared with experts for analysis and the sounds can be analysed on increasingly sophisticated automated systems. 

 

Recently we were sent a video that captured bird calls and the silhouettes of two large birds high in the canopy of coastal forest in the eastern Marlborough Sounds.  I've copied a still from the video below alongside a kōkako silhouette.  After some deliberation, our team decided that the birds were long-tailed cuckoos - the third image.  If you'd like to have a look at the video, you can view it here - listen carefully for the faint cuckoo calls in the background. 

 

The Trust has been searching for the South Island kōkako since 2010 and inviting reports from the public for nearly five years.  Sometimes reports we receive are from a while ago.  In our news below, we share reports of encounters from the 1980s, and, would you believe, the 1880s!  Recent reports of possible encounters from the past three months are also detailed.

 

As you can see, we are still searching.  We still need to find the evidence, whether through academic collaborations - and we have an update on those projects below - through volunteers following up some great reports of encounters, or through more members of the public knowing that we need their help - and knowing what to look and listen for so that more encounter reports are submitted.  We also need to sustain our efforts, with donations, grants and or sponsorship.  In this newsletter, we have included a short survey - we're asking for your advice as to what we could do better across all that we do and particularly how we present ourselves to you. 

 

We wish you a safe and happy festive season, and we hope you get to enjoy our wonderful outdoors this summer.  Don't forget, if you see or hear something unusual on your forest walk or adventure, please try to capture it on video with your phone or camera. Sound engineers and IT experts can do marvellous things with recordings. 

 

Happy searching!

 

Inger Perkins

Manager, South Island Kōkako Charitable Trust

From left, image supplied, kōkako (Photo: Mark Darin), long tailed cuckoo (Photo: Adam Clarke)

We need your help - what can we do better?

First things first - we're a small team grappling with a huge problem - how to find an elusive bird in our vast native forests on South and Stewart Islands.

 

We'd like your help to tell us what we're doing well and what we could do better. Are our messages on social media registering effectively? How else can we pitch our story? What might we have overlooked?

 

We have created a few short questions for you using a simple Google form. We're all bombarded for feedback these days but we'd be very grateful for your advice.

 

You can be as brief or fulsome as you like. We don't mind full-on candid either.

Thank you very much and here's the link to the form:

 

What can we do better? Here are our questions

Latest possible encounter reports

After a couple of quiet months without any reports, we have received several encounter reports since early September.  Often only bird calls have been heard, but they are sufficiently different to stop trampers and mountain bikers in their tracks.  People are keen to work out what they have heard and, when searching the internet, come across recordings of NI kōkako for comparison.  They can then direct us to that part of a recording that sounds most similar to the call they have heard. 

 

This from the start of the Pororari Track at Punakaiki, which is especially intriguing because of the behaviour of other birds:

"I was walking back to the carpark, enjoying tuis and bellbirds singing, in the bushy area on the well defined track. The bellbirds were imitating tuis, then they went very repetitive when I heard this strange call, like if someone was blowing in a bottle, bit similar to a flute. The call sounded 3 or 4 times, then it was gone."

 

The best recent report has come from the South Coast Track, Fiordland.  Although the bird was not seen, the description of the calls and the location have us very interested and we're excited that the report will be followed up with the installation of trail cameras and an acoustic recorder.  Here's an extract from that report from mid October:

"Three very similar, single notes that sounded like nothing I had heard before - quality and clarity like a hollow pipe being blown - I spend a lot of time on that track as we have 120 stoat traps that I check monthly along the south Coast track from the Track Burn through to the Wairaurahiri river I'm there approximately 34 day a year. ... I did not get a visual but it did stop me in my tracks because as I said I'd never heard a call like that it was so clear."

 

Another report came from the Heaphy Track about 500m from Flanagan's Corner coming from Aorere Shelter.  The report was from 20th October and when discussing with others sharing the Perry Saddle hut, several others had heard similar calls in the same place.

"I heard a bird call I had never heard before in NZ bush, and it sounded like it was coming from the treetops. In my opinion the closest to a similar call would be a Tui but the Tui just makes short noises and changes a lot but this was a longer note more similar to the Northern Kokako but certainly not the same.

 

Our Advisory Trustee, Rhys Buckingham, heard what he believed to be a kōkako call near Lake Moeraki in South Westland, while pulled off at the side of the road.  

"I heard a short organ song of about 5-6 notes. It was very loud, strong and haunting, and not repeated. The last three notes were repeated loud 'hollow' notes like a slow piping that penetrated to the marrow of the ear bone, poetically speaking."

 

We have received another report from the Waiuta Big River Track south of Reefton on the West Coast.  Our follow up there earlier this year revealed no sign of the bird, but reports like this continue to give us hope that there may be a kōkako there:

"I heard one long note in the forest there, I stopped and listened for a while and whistled back and heard another three long bird calls. At first I thought it was a bellbird. I've just listened to a clip of a kokako call and it was very similar, but I'm not 100% sure. ... There was a lot of birdsong that morning. ... I was listening out for what I thought were bellbirds and then there was one particularly long bird call which was odd that it made me stop. I whistled it back, and then heard another three long calls."

 

While installing recorders in the Buttress Stream area of Abel Tasman National Park as part of the bioacoustic study "a short series of long flute notes" were heard, made all the more interesting as there was some moss grubbing in the area - thought to be associated with SI kōkako when palm sized pieces of moss are carefully removed - as opposed to the rough grubbing by a weka or blackbird. 

 

The Salisbury Track in the Flora/Cobb area of Kahurangi National Park was the site of a report of more interesting bird song a few weeks ago:

"We heard very unusual bird song that had us stop and listen for a few minutes. Lower in pitch than everything else, but brighter and higher in pitch than a ruru. Mostly (entirely?) one note, but coming in bursts. So, each call might have lasted 2-3 seconds, each one comprising maybe 8 bursts. We heard this maybe 7 or 8 times, possibly from two different directions. It didn't sound terribly close. There was a kākā in the vicinity which we heard very distinctly at around the same time."

 

A couple of recordings have been sent to us as well, which are immensely useful in terms of assisting identification of encounter reports.  One we believe to be kaka from the Heaphy Track, and the other, as noted above, long-tailed cuckoo at Mount Robertson in the eastern Marlborough Sounds.

 

A report of a sighting of a bird from Point Elizabeth Track north of Greymouth on the West Coast is very interesting and we're keen to get to the bottom of this:

"Red wattle, grey plumage, size bigger than a black bird, but smaller than a tui.  Call heard before sighting - distinct and unusual call of this bird as a long hollow haunting sound".  

 

Finally two encounters from the Old Ghost Road in the area of the Lyell Saddle have been reported to us and we're looking into these.  A call was described as being from an unknown bird, but when a sighting was added the following day: "Large grey bird similar shape to a magpie flew below us whilst stopped at lookout point. Similar colour to a grey heron", and with other reports from the track in recent years, we're very keen for more reports and especially video!

 

As usual, none of these reports can be confirmed of course, but they are interesting and encouraging. 

 

As you plan your next adventure into possible South Island kōkako country, please consult our interactive map.  Then keep your camera or phone handy to record unusual calls when you get out there ... and of course what we really need is a photo or video!

 

Have a look at our interactive map here. 

Other news

Update on the science behind the search

 

Maths and environmental DNA are helping our search efforts as we collaborate with scientists at Victoria and Otago Universities. 

 

Find out more here including an update on recent field work to install acoustic recorders at our own 'sites of interest'.

 

Read more

About not losing hope

 

We were honoured to receive an email from Creek Waddington, the great great nephew of author W.H. Chinn who wrote about his experience of New Zealand birds, including the kōkako, growing up in the Buller in the 1870s and 1880s.  

 

Tragically, the huia has become extinct since he saw them and he noted in his book, 'Packtrack to Highway', written in 1963, that others would follow, "a sad commentary on our regime".  

 

Creek hopes that we won't lose hope - and we're not about to.

 

Read the story here.

(Photo credit: Martin Sanders)

Waikakaho Waikokako

 

Occasionally, a report of a possible encounter with a South Island kōkako will be from some time ago. These historic reports add to our knowledge of an area and we welcome them.

 

It was with great pleasure that we received such a report from Jeanette Collins. Jeanette's late father, Ced Collins, believed he witnessed a kōkako in the native bush in the head of the Waikakaho Valley, to the north of the Wairau River, Marlborough, in the late 1980s.  Jeanette shared a work of art painted in memory of the encounter.

 

Read more

Stunning SI kōkako prints available

 

You may have seen that our science projects were featured on the front of the spring edition of the Forest & Bird magazine earlier this year with this stunning image. 

 

Limited edition prints of the "Grey Ghost" are available from the Forest & Bird shop. They are $60 each and all the profits go towards their conservation work.

 

The photographer/artist, Tara Swan, kindly allowed us to use one of her photographs of a NI kōkako, photoshopped to show an orange wattle, for our reward poster, (and borrowed again with a Christmassy look below!)

 

There are only 300 signed prints available - find them here.

 

Jos Browning painting of a SI kokako

There are many ways you can help

 

In addition to actually looking out for the South Island kōkako, we need your help in other ways to find and conserve this ancient bird.

 

Perhaps a donation instead of a Christmas present?  We have a card you could download and print or email to a suitably understanding and appreciative friend or relative!  Find out more here.

 

Why not become a Friend now or make a one-off donation here. 

Thank you very much.

 

And don't forget, when we have enough new Friends, we will be drawing a winner from our Friends for a beautiful painting of the South Island kōkako by Jos Browning.

Need more information? 

 

There's plenty on our website including all you need to know and our Search Blog 

 

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