KIWI
Stats* at a glance
Since 2006
687 juveniles released into the wild:
305 to Maungataniwha Native
308 to Pohokura
74 to other conservation initiatives
91 record releases in a season ('21/'22)
1 kiwi population (Maungataniwha Native Forest) deemed ‘viable subject to ongoing predator control’ for the next three decades
'23/'24 breeding season
42 paired males tagged
104 eggs from 33 monitored birds
81 juveniles released into the wild:
40 to Maungataniwha Native
41 to Pohokura
8 juvenile kiwi pending release
* monitored and recorded as part of Operation Nest Egg, as at 8 August 2024
Indications are that the kiwi population on our property in the Maungataniwha Native Forest is of regional significance. In 2005 trust members discovered a remnant kiwi population, unusual as the property had no history of pest control. Pete Shaw consulted with Dr John McLennan, a leading kiwi scientist, and what eventuated was the Maungataniwha Kiwi Project.
Over the years the Maungataniwha Kiwi Project has carved out a name for itself as one of the most prolific and successful kiwi conservation initiatives in the country
The goals of the Maungataniwha Kiwi Project are twofold:
-
secure and enhance the Kiwi population in the Maungataniwha Native Forest
-
assist in the provision of Kiwi for the restocking of the Trust’s Pohokura property and other carefully-selected kiwi conservation initiatives.
Kiwi eggs are taken from Maungataniwha and incubated. The resulting chicks are then reared in safety at the Cape Sanctuary south of Napier, or at other locations, until they are large enough to defend themselves against stoats (at about 850 grams).
This process of taking eggs from the wild, to be incubated and raised in a controlled environment and then released back to the wild, is part of Operation Nest Egg.
Not all kiwi taken from Maungataniwha as eggs make their way back to that forest. Some are released at Pohokura, Cape Sanctuary, Otanewainuku, the Whirinaki, the Kaweka Ranges and into captive breeding programmes.
Our work with kiwi could not happen without the help and investment from our conservation partners, particularly the Cape Sanctuary, the National Kiwi Hatchery and its funder Ngai Tahu, the Department of Conservation and Kiwis for kiwi, the only national charity dedicated to protecting kiwi.