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Kererū

The kererū (Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae) or New Zealand pigeon is a species of pigeon native to New Zealand. Johann Friedrich Gmelin described the bird in 1789 as a large, conspicuous pigeon up to 50 cm (20 in) in length and 550–850 g (19–30 oz) in weight, with a white breast and iridescent green–blue plumage. Two subspecies have been recognised; the second—the Norfolk pigeon of Norfolk Island—became extinct in the early 20th century. Kererū pairs are monogamous, breeding over successive seasons and remaining together when not breeding. They construct nests with twigs in trees, with a single egg clutch.

Kererū
Tāwharanui Peninsula, New Zealand
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Class: Aves
Order: Columbiformes
Family: Columbidae
Genus: Hemiphaga
Species:
H. novaeseelandiae
Binomial name
Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae
(Gmelin, 1789)
Synonyms
  • Columba novaeseelandiae Gmelin
  • Carpophaga novaeseelandiae (Gmelin)

Found in a variety of habitats across the country, the kererū feeds mainly on fruits, as well as leaves, buds and flowers. Although widespread in both forest and urban habitats, its numbers have declined significantly since European colonisation and the arrival of invasive mammals such as rats, stoats and possums. However, the results of nationwide bird surveys indicate that there has been a significant recovery in the population of kererū in suburban areas. As of 2022, the IUCN Red List classifies the species as least concern, while the Department of Conservation (DOC) classifies the kererū as "not threatened" but conservation dependent.

Considered a taonga (cultural treasure) to the Māori people, the kererū was historically a major food source in Māori culture. However, due to the previous decline in its population, hunting is illegal. Customary use of kererū is restricted to the use of feathers and bones obtained from dead birds collected by DOC. This issue has received significant public and political attention, as some people argue that bans on kererū hunting are detrimental to Māori traditions. In 2018, the kererū was designated Bird of the Year by the New Zealand organisation Forest & Bird, and in 2019, the exoplanet HD 137388 b was renamed Kererū in its honour.

Taxonomy and nomenclature edit

History and binomials edit

English ornithologist John Latham wrote about the kererū in his A General Synopsis of Birds in 1783 but did not give it a scientific name.[2] German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin gave it its first formal description in 1789, placing it in genus Columba as C. novaeseelandiae,[3] with Latham naming it Columba zealandica in his 1790 Index Ornithologicus.[4] The genus Hemiphaga was introduced by the French naturalist Charles Lucien Bonaparte in 1854 with the kererū (Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae) as the type species for that genus.[5] The name combines the Ancient Greek hēmi meaning "half-" or "small", with the end of the genus name Carpophaga, "fruit eating", as Bonaparte saw the genus as related to both that genus and Megaloprepia (now incorporated into Ptilinopus).[6]

Subspecies edit

 
The extinct Norfolk pigeon (H. n. subspecies spadicea), lithograph by John Gerrard Keulemans (1907), based on a preserved specimen in the Natural History Museum at Tring

Two subspecies are recognised: H. n. subspecies novaseelandiae, which is found throughout New Zealand, and the little-studied Norfolk pigeon (H. n. subspecies spadicea) of Norfolk Island, now extinct. The subspecies differed in their plumage colour and shape.[7] In 2001, it was proposed that a third subspecies—H. n. chathamensis or the Chatham pigeon—should be raised to full species status as H. chathamensis on the basis of its distinct plumage, larger size and differing bone structure.[8] This has since been widely accepted.[9][10] Analysis of mitochondrial DNA confirmed the kererū and Norfolk pigeons to be more closely related to each other than the Chatham pigeon, and that dispersal between the three landmasses most likely occurred during the Pleistocene epoch.[11]

Classification edit

The kererū belongs to the family Columbidae, and the subfamily Ptilinopinae, which is found throughout Southeast Asia, Malaya, Australia and New Zealand. The members of this subfamily feed largely on fruits, mainly stone fruit.[12] Within the subfamily, the kererū and Chatham pigeon are in a clade with a lineage that has given rise to the topknot pigeon (Lopholaimus antarcticus) of Australia and the mountain pigeons (Gymnophaps) of New Guinea, as shown in the cladogram below.[13]

kererū (Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae)

Chatham pigeon (Hemiphaga chathamensis)

topknot pigeon (Lopholaimus antarcticus)

Papuan mountain pigeon (Gymnophaps albertisii)

Common names edit

"New Zealand pigeon" has been designated the official common name of the kererū by the International Ornithologists' Union (IOC).[14] The word kererū (which is both singular and plural) is the most common Māori name,[15] and a variety of mainstream sources now use the name kererū for the species.[16][17][18][19][20][21] Spelling Māori loanwords with macrons—that indicate a long vowel—is now common in New Zealand English, where technically possible.[22][23] It is also known as kūkupa and kūkū in some parts of the North Island, particularly in Northland,[15] and Latham had reported the name "Hagarrèroo" in 1783.[2] Kererū have also been called "wood pigeons".[24]

Description edit

 
A kererū chick in the nest

The kererū is a large arboreal pigeon weighing 550–850 g (19–30 oz),[25] and is up to 50 cm (20 in) in length, with a wingspan of around 75 cm (30 in).[7] Its appearance is that of a typical pigeon, in that it has a relatively small head, a straight soft-based bill and loosely attached feathers.[12] The sexes have similar plumage. The head, neck and upper breast are dark green with a gold-bronze highlights, while the nape, upper back and secondary coverts are a copper-sheened purple, lightening to a more grey-green on the lower back, rump and the rest of upper surface of the wings. The tail is dark brown with green highlights and a pale edge. The breast is white, and sharply demarcated from the darker parts of its plumage. The undertail and underwing coverts are mainly pale grey. The bill is red with an orange tip, the feet dark red, and eyes are red with a pink orbital ring.[7] Juveniles have a similar colouration but are generally paler with dull colours for the beak, eyes and feet and a shorter tail.[26] The extinct Norfolk Island subspecies had a chestnut mantle, more grey outer wings and rump, a dark purple tail and white under wing and undertail coverts.[7]

Kererū make occasional soft coo sounds, and their wings make a characteristic "whoosh" during flight.[27] The bird's flight is also distinctive; birds will often ascend slowly before making steep parabolic dives.[26]

Environment and distribution edit

Usually they are found from Northland to Stewart Island/Rakiura and offshore islands,[28] the kererū was historically abundant throughout the country.[17] Its lack of genetic diversity suggests the species retreated to forest refugia during periods of Quaternary glaciation and rapidly spread across the country again when the climate grew warmer.[11] Kererū bones have been recovered from Raoul Island in the Kermadecs, confirming the species once inhabited the island, though it was made locally extinct through hunting and cat predation in the late 1800s.[29] They can be found in a variety of habitats including in native lowland forest, scrub, the countryside, and city gardens and parks.[30]

The kererū lives in habitats ranging in altitude from coastal to montane.[31] However their numbers declined significantly after European colonisation.[17] This was due mainly to a decrease in habitat, introduced predators and hunting.[17] Currently, whether kererū are present at a particular location within New Zealand is dependent on numerous factors such as forest cover, forest type and density of predators.[17] Although sedentary, kererū can move considerable distances within their range; most fieldwork showed them moving up to 25 km (16 mi), generally looking for food.[7] A 2011 study in Southland revealed that three of four kererū tagged around Invercargill crossed the Foveaux Strait to Stewart Island, and travelled up to 100 km (62 mi).[32]

Feeding edit

 
A territorial dispute between kererū

The kererū is primarily frugivorous, preferring fruit from native trees, but also eating leaves, flowers and buds.[28][33] The kererū feeds on many species with tropical affinities, including the Lauraceae and Arecaceae,[34][35][36] which abound in the essentially subtropical forests of northern New Zealand. They also feed on podocarp species such as miro (Prumnopitys ferruginea) and kahikatea (Dacrycarpus dacrydioides).[34][35][36][37] Other fruit sought after by kererū include those of tawa (Beilschmiedia tawa), taraire (Beilschmiedia tarairi), pūriri (Vitex lucens), pigeonwood (Hedycarya arborea), as well as tītoki (Alectryon excelsus), nīkau (Rhopalostylis sapida), karaka (Corynocarpus laevigatus), Coprosma, and introduced species such as elder (Sambucus nigra), privet (Ligustrum species) and plums.[38] Because of its diverse diet and widespread distribution, the kererū plays an important ecological role, and is vital to the health of podocarp-broadleaf forest.[39][40]

While fruit comprises the major part of its diet, the kererū also browses on leaves and buds from a wide variety of both native and exotic species, especially nitrogen-rich foliage during breeding.[19][41] Its diet changes seasonally as the availability of fruit changes, and leaves can comprise most of its diet at certain times of the year.[42] Preferred leaves include kōwhai, tree lucerne, willow, elm, and poplar.[28]

After eating, kererū often sun themselves while digesting their food. This behaviour can lead to the fruit fermenting in the bird's crop, particularly during warm summer weather, and can cause the bird to become intoxicated.[24] The kererū displays typical pigeon behaviour, including drinking by suction (unlike many birds which drink by raising their heads, using the assistance of gravity).[43] Kererū also feed crop milk to hatchlings.[12]

Breeding and lifespan edit

Kererū courtship display (24 s)

The kererū is monogamous; pairs are thought to reproduce together over multiple seasons, and remain together when not breeding.[7] Breeding generally depends on the availability of ripe fruit, which varies seasonally, annually, and by location. In the warmer Northland region, kererū are able to raise young year round, provided enough fruit is available.[40] They do not breed when moulting, which tends to take place between March and May.[40] Further, south fewer subtropical tree species grow, and in these areas breeding usually occurs between October (early spring) and April (late summer/early autumn), again depending on fruit availability. During the breeding season the male kererū performs display flights, where it ascends steeply and appears to stall at the top of the flight, before a steep swooping descent. The courtship display includes the male turning around on a perch adjacent to a female, placing the tip of the bill into a wing, and stretching out his neck while bowing his head. He then bounces up and down with his bill resting on his chest, and proceeds to mate with her if she is receptive,[44] which she indicates by lowering her body so he can mount her.[7]

The kererū nests in the canopy of trees, shrubs, or hedges, anywhere from 1.8 to 9.1 m (5.9 to 29.9 ft) above the ground. Both birds construct the unlined platform of twigs—mostly kānuka (Kunzea ericoides), which can be up to 30 cm (12 in) across. The clutch consists of a single oval white egg, which is 49 mm long by 34 mm wide.[7] It is incubated for 28–29 days, with the male and female taking turns to incubate in shifts of around six hours.[27] Fieldwork in Motatau Forest in Northland found that both parents then brooded the chick for 9–13 days, followed by the female alone. After 13–27 days, parents fed the chick without brooding. Weight gain is rapid in the first 8 days, while feathers appear between 5th and 8th days.[45] The young bird fledges after 30–45 days.[46] A pair may begin building a second nest before their chick in the first nest fledges.[7] In seasons of plentiful fruit the kererū can successfully nest up to four times.[40] Kererū have a lifespan of 15 to 25 years; in 2020, a 29-year-old bird nicknamed "Pidge" turned up in Rotorua after not being seen for 24 years.[47]

Conservation edit

 
Traffic sign in New Zealand cautioning drivers of nearby kererū

Kererū were numerous until the 1960s, but they have since come under threat from introduced mammalian species, hunting, habitat degradation, and poor reproductive success.[46][48][49][50] The introduced Australian common brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula) and introduced species of rats—mainly the black rat (Rattus rattus), but also the Polynesian rat (R. exulans) and brown rat (R. norvegicus)—have played a role in reducing the population of kererū. Both possums and rats significantly reduce the amount of fruit available for kererū, and they also prey on kererū eggs and nestlings; cats and stoats kill adults as well as young.[40][51] On Norfolk Island, the local subspecies was last seen in 1900; direct hunting by people was probably the main cause of extinction.[52]

The Wild Birds Protection Act 1864 established hunting season for the species from April to July.[53] With kererū populations declining across the country, harvests became increasingly restricted by the government.[54] This culminated in the Animals Protection and Game Act 1921–1922, which designated the kererū as an absolutely protected species, although the enforcement against hunting was not consistent.[12][55] This act was repealed and replaced by the Wildlife Act 1953, which reaffirmed the status of kererū as a protected species and outlawed any taking of the birds. Prosecutions have been taken enforcing this law.[55] Māori have protested at each of these law changes, claiming a traditional right to hunt the pigeon.[56]

Kererū are also vulnerable to injury or death as a result of collisions with vehicles. A large number of kererū fatalities have been reported alongside State Highway 2 in Wellington, as a result of low-flying birds being struck by vehicles as they fly across the motorway to feed on the flowers of tree lucerne.[57] Kererū can also be injured or killed following collisions with the windows of buildings.[58] In 2021, the Urban Wildlife Trust commenced a campaign to help protect kererū and other birds from colliding with the large glazed areas surrounding the upper terminal building of the Wellington Cable Car, adjacent to Wellington Botanic Gardens. The proposed solution was the installation of a grid of dots permanently fixed to approximately 150 m2 (1,600 sq ft) of glass.[59]

As of 2022, the kererū has been classified under the IUCN Red List as "Least Concern", and the listing reports an increasing population trend.[1] The Department of Conservation (DOC) classifies the kererū under the New Zealand threat classification system as "not threatened" with an increasing population but views the species as conservation dependent.[60] However, it has been argued that several of the factors that caused the historic decrease in population are still present and could continue to damage the population.[17]

The Great Kererū Count edit

A survey of kererū population was undertaken for 10 consecutive days every year from 2013 to 2021, using observations from members of the public. The Great Kererū Count has been claimed to be New Zealand's largest citizen science project. It was led by the conservation organisations Kererū Discovery and Urban Wildlife Trust, in conjunction with city councils in Wellington, Dunedin and Nelson, and Victoria University of Wellington.[61][62]

The findings from the annual count, together with the results of a separate citizen science project—the annual New Zealand Garden Bird Survey—indicate that there has been a recovery in the population of kererū in suburban areas, with a 79% increase in sightings from 2010 to 2020.[63] The final Great Kererū Count was held in 2021, with more sightings recorded than in previous years. There were 24,562 kererū counted in the 10-day period 17–26 September, with 28% from Auckland.[64]

Relationship with humans edit

 
Closeup of head highlighting its iridescent feathers

In Māori culture edit

Traditionally used for both its meat and feathers, the kererū is considered taonga to Māori; as such, for various iwi such as Ngāi Tūhoe, kererū forms an important part of their cultural identity.[65] Kererū were the food of choice associated with Puanga celebrations as the birds are fat from eating berries that ripen during this time.[66] They also tended to be easier to catch at this time of year due to their intoxication from fermented berries.[66] Kererū feathers continue to be retained for making kākahu (fine cloaks), while the tail feathers were used to decorate the tahā huahua (food storage containers).[48][65][67]

Snaring was the most common method of capturing kererū; less commonly, birds were speared.[48][68] One type of snaring used waka waituhi, a trap where snares were placed on the sides of a water trough suspended in a tree.[68] As the kererū landed to drink from the trough, they would become caught by the snare. Occasionally, tame kererū were used as decoys to entice others.[69] Once caught, kererū were typically preserved in their own fat within tahā huahua (food storage containers).[48][67] They were so abundant that New Zealand ornithologist Walter Buller reported at least 8000 birds were caught and prepared in this manner from a grove of miro near Lake Taupō over July and August 1882.[70]

In one Māori legend, the hero and trickster Māui took the form of a kererū when he went down into the underworld in search of his parents. According to this legend, the reason for the kererū's iridescent green-blue and white plumage is because when Māui transformed into the kererū, he was carrying the skirt/apron and belt of his mother, Tāranga.[48] The apron, Te Taro o Tāranga, is represented by the white breast feathers; the belt, Te Tātua a Tāranga, is signified by the green-blue feathers on the neck of the kererū.[71]

In archaeological sites edit

Kererū remains have been found in both inland and coastal sites throughout New Zealand.[72] Identification of bone specimens in archaeological sites has been difficult due to their being fragmented during preparation for food,[73] or because fine-mesh sieving was not carried out during excavations to retrieve bone samples.[74] A genetic analysis of bones from paleontological and archaeological sites, to determine the extent of fauna and the human impact on them, identified kererū bones at seven archaeological sites.[73][75][76] These sites give insight into the interactions between humans and kererū, including the effect of Māori hunting on historic kererū populations.[73][76] As well as being found on the main islands of New Zealand, kererū bones have also been recovered from sites excavated at Harataonga Bay on Great Barrier Island.[74] In the South Island, excavations in 2018 at the Raincliff rock art shelter in South Canterbury, revealed kererū along with the bones of rats, extinct moa and New Zealand quail.[77] Kererū bones, along with bones of other forest birds kākā, kākāpō and red-crowned parakeets, were also found in rock shelter sites on Lee Island, Lake Te Anau in Southland.[78]

Harvesting edit

 
Egg at museum

From the 1990s, the issue of whether to re-establish the customary harvest of kererū has received significant public and political attention.[18] In 1994, the New Zealand Conservation Authority published a discussion paper about allowing the harvest of various species protected under the Wildlife Act 1953, including the kererū.[79] It has been argued that preventing the customary harvests of taonga such as kererū is in-part degrading or facilitating the loss of mātauranga (traditional knowledge) among Māori.[65] Furthermore, some argue that because the Treaty of Waitangi guarantees tangata whenua possession of taonga such as kererū, it therefore guarantees their right to harvest those taonga.[80] Currently, customary use of kererū is restricted to the use of feathers and bones obtained from dead birds collected by DOC.[81]

Recognition edit

The kererū is featured on the reverse side of the series 3 (1967–1981) and series 4 (1981–1991) New Zealand twenty-dollar note.[82] In 2018, the kererū was the winner of the annual Bird of the Year competition run by the New Zealand Forest & Bird organisation.[83][84] In 2019, the exoplanet originally named HD 137388 b was renamed in honour of the kererū.[85][86]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • The Kererū Discovery Project, a programme for New Zealanders to help arrest the decline of the species through awareness and action in their own gardens
  • The Great Kererū Count 27 June 2021 at the Wayback Machine, an annual citizen science project counting kererū throughout New Zealand
  • Project Kererū, a voluntary community based conservation project
  • Photo of pigeon trough (snare) in Te Ara

kererū, kereru, redirects, here, exoplanet, planet, rural, homestead, school, north, island, maraekakaho, kererū, hemiphaga, novaeseelandiae, zealand, pigeon, species, pigeon, native, zealand, johann, friedrich, gmelin, described, bird, 1789, large, conspicuou. Kereru redirects here For the exoplanet see Kereru planet For the rural homestead or school on North Island see Maraekakaho The kereru Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae or New Zealand pigeon is a species of pigeon native to New Zealand Johann Friedrich Gmelin described the bird in 1789 as a large conspicuous pigeon up to 50 cm 20 in in length and 550 850 g 19 30 oz in weight with a white breast and iridescent green blue plumage Two subspecies have been recognised the second the Norfolk pigeon of Norfolk Island became extinct in the early 20th century Kereru pairs are monogamous breeding over successive seasons and remaining together when not breeding They construct nests with twigs in trees with a single egg clutch KereruTawharanui Peninsula New ZealandConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClade DinosauriaClass AvesOrder ColumbiformesFamily ColumbidaeGenus HemiphagaSpecies H novaeseelandiaeBinomial nameHemiphaga novaeseelandiae Gmelin 1789 SynonymsColumba novaeseelandiaeGmelinCarpophaga novaeseelandiae Gmelin Found in a variety of habitats across the country the kereru feeds mainly on fruits as well as leaves buds and flowers Although widespread in both forest and urban habitats its numbers have declined significantly since European colonisation and the arrival of invasive mammals such as rats stoats and possums However the results of nationwide bird surveys indicate that there has been a significant recovery in the population of kereru in suburban areas As of 2022 the IUCN Red List classifies the species as least concern while the Department of Conservation DOC classifies the kereru as not threatened but conservation dependent Considered a taonga cultural treasure to the Maori people the kereru was historically a major food source in Maori culture However due to the previous decline in its population hunting is illegal Customary use of kereru is restricted to the use of feathers and bones obtained from dead birds collected by DOC This issue has received significant public and political attention as some people argue that bans on kereru hunting are detrimental to Maori traditions In 2018 the kereru was designated Bird of the Year by the New Zealand organisation Forest amp Bird and in 2019 the exoplanet HD 137388 b was renamed Kereru in its honour Contents 1 Taxonomy and nomenclature 1 1 History and binomials 1 2 Subspecies 1 3 Classification 1 4 Common names 2 Description 3 Environment and distribution 4 Feeding 5 Breeding and lifespan 6 Conservation 6 1 The Great Kereru Count 7 Relationship with humans 7 1 In Maori culture 7 2 In archaeological sites 7 3 Harvesting 7 4 Recognition 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksTaxonomy and nomenclature editHistory and binomials edit English ornithologist John Latham wrote about the kereru in his A General Synopsis of Birds in 1783 but did not give it a scientific name 2 German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin gave it its first formal description in 1789 placing it in genus Columba as C novaeseelandiae 3 with Latham naming it Columba zealandica in his 1790 Index Ornithologicus 4 The genus Hemiphaga was introduced by the French naturalist Charles Lucien Bonaparte in 1854 with the kereru Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae as the type species for that genus 5 The name combines the Ancient Greek hemi meaning half or small with the end of the genus name Carpophaga fruit eating as Bonaparte saw the genus as related to both that genus and Megaloprepia now incorporated into Ptilinopus 6 Subspecies edit nbsp The extinct Norfolk pigeon H n subspecies spadicea lithograph by John Gerrard Keulemans 1907 based on a preserved specimen in the Natural History Museum at TringTwo subspecies are recognised H n subspecies novaseelandiae which is found throughout New Zealand and the little studied Norfolk pigeon H n subspecies spadicea of Norfolk Island now extinct The subspecies differed in their plumage colour and shape 7 In 2001 it was proposed that a third subspecies H n chathamensis or the Chatham pigeon should be raised to full species status as H chathamensis on the basis of its distinct plumage larger size and differing bone structure 8 This has since been widely accepted 9 10 Analysis of mitochondrial DNA confirmed the kereru and Norfolk pigeons to be more closely related to each other than the Chatham pigeon and that dispersal between the three landmasses most likely occurred during the Pleistocene epoch 11 Classification edit The kereru belongs to the family Columbidae and the subfamily Ptilinopinae which is found throughout Southeast Asia Malaya Australia and New Zealand The members of this subfamily feed largely on fruits mainly stone fruit 12 Within the subfamily the kereru and Chatham pigeon are in a clade with a lineage that has given rise to the topknot pigeon Lopholaimus antarcticus of Australia and the mountain pigeons Gymnophaps of New Guinea as shown in the cladogram below 13 kereru Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae Chatham pigeon Hemiphaga chathamensis topknot pigeon Lopholaimus antarcticus Papuan mountain pigeon Gymnophaps albertisii Common names edit New Zealand pigeon has been designated the official common name of the kereru by the International Ornithologists Union IOC 14 The word kereru which is both singular and plural is the most common Maori name 15 and a variety of mainstream sources now use the name kereru for the species 16 17 18 19 20 21 Spelling Maori loanwords with macrons that indicate a long vowel is now common in New Zealand English where technically possible 22 23 It is also known as kukupa and kuku in some parts of the North Island particularly in Northland 15 and Latham had reported the name Hagarreroo in 1783 2 Kereru have also been called wood pigeons 24 Description edit nbsp A kereru chick in the nestThe kereru is a large arboreal pigeon weighing 550 850 g 19 30 oz 25 and is up to 50 cm 20 in in length with a wingspan of around 75 cm 30 in 7 Its appearance is that of a typical pigeon in that it has a relatively small head a straight soft based bill and loosely attached feathers 12 The sexes have similar plumage The head neck and upper breast are dark green with a gold bronze highlights while the nape upper back and secondary coverts are a copper sheened purple lightening to a more grey green on the lower back rump and the rest of upper surface of the wings The tail is dark brown with green highlights and a pale edge The breast is white and sharply demarcated from the darker parts of its plumage The undertail and underwing coverts are mainly pale grey The bill is red with an orange tip the feet dark red and eyes are red with a pink orbital ring 7 Juveniles have a similar colouration but are generally paler with dull colours for the beak eyes and feet and a shorter tail 26 The extinct Norfolk Island subspecies had a chestnut mantle more grey outer wings and rump a dark purple tail and white under wing and undertail coverts 7 Kereru make occasional soft coo sounds and their wings make a characteristic whoosh during flight 27 The bird s flight is also distinctive birds will often ascend slowly before making steep parabolic dives 26 Environment and distribution editUsually they are found from Northland to Stewart Island Rakiura and offshore islands 28 the kereru was historically abundant throughout the country 17 Its lack of genetic diversity suggests the species retreated to forest refugia during periods of Quaternary glaciation and rapidly spread across the country again when the climate grew warmer 11 Kereru bones have been recovered from Raoul Island in the Kermadecs confirming the species once inhabited the island though it was made locally extinct through hunting and cat predation in the late 1800s 29 They can be found in a variety of habitats including in native lowland forest scrub the countryside and city gardens and parks 30 The kereru lives in habitats ranging in altitude from coastal to montane 31 However their numbers declined significantly after European colonisation 17 This was due mainly to a decrease in habitat introduced predators and hunting 17 Currently whether kereru are present at a particular location within New Zealand is dependent on numerous factors such as forest cover forest type and density of predators 17 Although sedentary kereru can move considerable distances within their range most fieldwork showed them moving up to 25 km 16 mi generally looking for food 7 A 2011 study in Southland revealed that three of four kereru tagged around Invercargill crossed the Foveaux Strait to Stewart Island and travelled up to 100 km 62 mi 32 Feeding edit nbsp A territorial dispute between kereruThe kereru is primarily frugivorous preferring fruit from native trees but also eating leaves flowers and buds 28 33 The kereru feeds on many species with tropical affinities including the Lauraceae and Arecaceae 34 35 36 which abound in the essentially subtropical forests of northern New Zealand They also feed on podocarp species such as miro Prumnopitys ferruginea and kahikatea Dacrycarpus dacrydioides 34 35 36 37 Other fruit sought after by kereru include those of tawa Beilschmiedia tawa taraire Beilschmiedia tarairi puriri Vitex lucens pigeonwood Hedycarya arborea as well as titoki Alectryon excelsus nikau Rhopalostylis sapida karaka Corynocarpus laevigatus Coprosma and introduced species such as elder Sambucus nigra privet Ligustrum species and plums 38 Because of its diverse diet and widespread distribution the kereru plays an important ecological role and is vital to the health of podocarp broadleaf forest 39 40 While fruit comprises the major part of its diet the kereru also browses on leaves and buds from a wide variety of both native and exotic species especially nitrogen rich foliage during breeding 19 41 Its diet changes seasonally as the availability of fruit changes and leaves can comprise most of its diet at certain times of the year 42 Preferred leaves include kōwhai tree lucerne willow elm and poplar 28 After eating kereru often sun themselves while digesting their food This behaviour can lead to the fruit fermenting in the bird s crop particularly during warm summer weather and can cause the bird to become intoxicated 24 The kereru displays typical pigeon behaviour including drinking by suction unlike many birds which drink by raising their heads using the assistance of gravity 43 Kereru also feed crop milk to hatchlings 12 Breeding and lifespan edit source source source source source source Kereru courtship display 24 s The kereru is monogamous pairs are thought to reproduce together over multiple seasons and remain together when not breeding 7 Breeding generally depends on the availability of ripe fruit which varies seasonally annually and by location In the warmer Northland region kereru are able to raise young year round provided enough fruit is available 40 They do not breed when moulting which tends to take place between March and May 40 Further south fewer subtropical tree species grow and in these areas breeding usually occurs between October early spring and April late summer early autumn again depending on fruit availability During the breeding season the male kereru performs display flights where it ascends steeply and appears to stall at the top of the flight before a steep swooping descent The courtship display includes the male turning around on a perch adjacent to a female placing the tip of the bill into a wing and stretching out his neck while bowing his head He then bounces up and down with his bill resting on his chest and proceeds to mate with her if she is receptive 44 which she indicates by lowering her body so he can mount her 7 The kereru nests in the canopy of trees shrubs or hedges anywhere from 1 8 to 9 1 m 5 9 to 29 9 ft above the ground Both birds construct the unlined platform of twigs mostly kanuka Kunzea ericoides which can be up to 30 cm 12 in across The clutch consists of a single oval white egg which is 49 mm long by 34 mm wide 7 It is incubated for 28 29 days with the male and female taking turns to incubate in shifts of around six hours 27 Fieldwork in Motatau Forest in Northland found that both parents then brooded the chick for 9 13 days followed by the female alone After 13 27 days parents fed the chick without brooding Weight gain is rapid in the first 8 days while feathers appear between 5th and 8th days 45 The young bird fledges after 30 45 days 46 A pair may begin building a second nest before their chick in the first nest fledges 7 In seasons of plentiful fruit the kereru can successfully nest up to four times 40 Kereru have a lifespan of 15 to 25 years in 2020 a 29 year old bird nicknamed Pidge turned up in Rotorua after not being seen for 24 years 47 Conservation edit nbsp Traffic sign in New Zealand cautioning drivers of nearby kereruKereru were numerous until the 1960s but they have since come under threat from introduced mammalian species hunting habitat degradation and poor reproductive success 46 48 49 50 The introduced Australian common brushtail possum Trichosurus vulpecula and introduced species of rats mainly the black rat Rattus rattus but also the Polynesian rat R exulans and brown rat R norvegicus have played a role in reducing the population of kereru Both possums and rats significantly reduce the amount of fruit available for kereru and they also prey on kereru eggs and nestlings cats and stoats kill adults as well as young 40 51 On Norfolk Island the local subspecies was last seen in 1900 direct hunting by people was probably the main cause of extinction 52 The Wild Birds Protection Act 1864 established hunting season for the species from April to July 53 With kereru populations declining across the country harvests became increasingly restricted by the government 54 This culminated in the Animals Protection and Game Act 1921 1922 which designated the kereru as an absolutely protected species although the enforcement against hunting was not consistent 12 55 This act was repealed and replaced by the Wildlife Act 1953 which reaffirmed the status of kereru as a protected species and outlawed any taking of the birds Prosecutions have been taken enforcing this law 55 Maori have protested at each of these law changes claiming a traditional right to hunt the pigeon 56 Kereru are also vulnerable to injury or death as a result of collisions with vehicles A large number of kereru fatalities have been reported alongside State Highway 2 in Wellington as a result of low flying birds being struck by vehicles as they fly across the motorway to feed on the flowers of tree lucerne 57 Kereru can also be injured or killed following collisions with the windows of buildings 58 In 2021 the Urban Wildlife Trust commenced a campaign to help protect kereru and other birds from colliding with the large glazed areas surrounding the upper terminal building of the Wellington Cable Car adjacent to Wellington Botanic Gardens The proposed solution was the installation of a grid of dots permanently fixed to approximately 150 m2 1 600 sq ft of glass 59 As of 2022 the kereru has been classified under the IUCN Red List as Least Concern and the listing reports an increasing population trend 1 The Department of Conservation DOC classifies the kereru under the New Zealand threat classification system as not threatened with an increasing population but views the species as conservation dependent 60 However it has been argued that several of the factors that caused the historic decrease in population are still present and could continue to damage the population 17 The Great Kereru Count edit A survey of kereru population was undertaken for 10 consecutive days every year from 2013 to 2021 using observations from members of the public The Great Kereru Count has been claimed to be New Zealand s largest citizen science project It was led by the conservation organisations Kereru Discovery and Urban Wildlife Trust in conjunction with city councils in Wellington Dunedin and Nelson and Victoria University of Wellington 61 62 The findings from the annual count together with the results of a separate citizen science project the annual New Zealand Garden Bird Survey indicate that there has been a recovery in the population of kereru in suburban areas with a 79 increase in sightings from 2010 to 2020 63 The final Great Kereru Count was held in 2021 with more sightings recorded than in previous years There were 24 562 kereru counted in the 10 day period 17 26 September with 28 from Auckland 64 Relationship with humans edit nbsp Closeup of head highlighting its iridescent feathersIn Maori culture edit Traditionally used for both its meat and feathers the kereru is considered taonga to Maori as such for various iwi such as Ngai Tuhoe kereru forms an important part of their cultural identity 65 Kereru were the food of choice associated with Puanga celebrations as the birds are fat from eating berries that ripen during this time 66 They also tended to be easier to catch at this time of year due to their intoxication from fermented berries 66 Kereru feathers continue to be retained for making kakahu fine cloaks while the tail feathers were used to decorate the taha huahua food storage containers 48 65 67 Snaring was the most common method of capturing kereru less commonly birds were speared 48 68 One type of snaring used waka waituhi a trap where snares were placed on the sides of a water trough suspended in a tree 68 As the kereru landed to drink from the trough they would become caught by the snare Occasionally tame kereru were used as decoys to entice others 69 Once caught kereru were typically preserved in their own fat within taha huahua food storage containers 48 67 They were so abundant that New Zealand ornithologist Walter Buller reported at least 8000 birds were caught and prepared in this manner from a grove of miro near Lake Taupō over July and August 1882 70 In one Maori legend the hero and trickster Maui took the form of a kereru when he went down into the underworld in search of his parents According to this legend the reason for the kereru s iridescent green blue and white plumage is because when Maui transformed into the kereru he was carrying the skirt apron and belt of his mother Taranga 48 The apron Te Taro o Taranga is represented by the white breast feathers the belt Te Tatua a Taranga is signified by the green blue feathers on the neck of the kereru 71 In archaeological sites edit Kereru remains have been found in both inland and coastal sites throughout New Zealand 72 Identification of bone specimens in archaeological sites has been difficult due to their being fragmented during preparation for food 73 or because fine mesh sieving was not carried out during excavations to retrieve bone samples 74 A genetic analysis of bones from paleontological and archaeological sites to determine the extent of fauna and the human impact on them identified kereru bones at seven archaeological sites 73 75 76 These sites give insight into the interactions between humans and kereru including the effect of Maori hunting on historic kereru populations 73 76 As well as being found on the main islands of New Zealand kereru bones have also been recovered from sites excavated at Harataonga Bay on Great Barrier Island 74 In the South Island excavations in 2018 at the Raincliff rock art shelter in South Canterbury revealed kereru along with the bones of rats extinct moa and New Zealand quail 77 Kereru bones along with bones of other forest birds kaka kakapō and red crowned parakeets were also found in rock shelter sites on Lee Island Lake Te Anau in Southland 78 Harvesting edit nbsp Egg at museumFrom the 1990s the issue of whether to re establish the customary harvest of kereru has received significant public and political attention 18 In 1994 the New Zealand Conservation Authority published a discussion paper about allowing the harvest of various species protected under the Wildlife Act 1953 including the kereru 79 It has been argued that preventing the customary harvests of taonga such as kereru is in part degrading or facilitating the loss of matauranga traditional knowledge among Maori 65 Furthermore some argue that because the Treaty of Waitangi guarantees tangata whenua possession of taonga such as kereru it therefore guarantees their right to harvest those taonga 80 Currently customary use of kereru is restricted to the use of feathers and bones obtained from dead birds collected by DOC 81 Recognition edit The kereru is featured on the reverse side of the series 3 1967 1981 and series 4 1981 1991 New Zealand twenty dollar note 82 In 2018 the kereru was the winner of the annual Bird of the Year competition run by the New Zealand Forest amp Bird organisation 83 84 In 2019 the exoplanet originally named HD 137388 b was renamed in honour of the kereru 85 86 See also editList of birds of New ZealandReferences edit a b BirdLife International 2022 Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2022 e T22727557A209064496 Retrieved 23 July 2022 a b Latham John 1783 General Synopsis of Birds Vol 2 London England Benj White p 640 Archived from the original on 21 September 2021 Retrieved 21 September 2021 Gmelin Johann Friedrich 1789 Systema naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis in Latin Vol 1 Leipzig Germany Impensis Georg Emanuel Beer p 773 Archived from the original on 21 September 2021 Retrieved 21 September 2021 Latham John 1790 Index ornithologicus Vol 2 London England Leigh amp Sotheby p 603 Archived from the original on 21 September 2021 Retrieved 21 September 2021 Bonaparte Charles Lucien 1854 Coup d oeil sur les pigeons deuxieme partie Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Seances de l Academie des Sciences in French 39 1072 1078 1076 1077 Archived from the original on 21 October 2021 Retrieved 15 October 2021 Gray Jeannie Fraser Ian 2013 Australian Bird Names A Complete Guide Collingwood Australia CSIRO Publishing p 23 ISBN 9780643104709 Archived from the original on 19 February 2022 Retrieved 23 October 2021 a b c d e f g h i Higgins P J Davies S J J F eds 1996 Handbook of Australian New Zealand and Antarctic Birds Volume 3 Snipe to Pigeons PDF Melbourne Victoria Oxford University Press pp 1016 1025 ISBN 978 0 19 553070 4 Archived PDF from the original on 29 October 2021 Retrieved 16 October 2021 Millener P R Powlesland R G 2001 The Chatham Islands pigeon Parea deserves full species status Hemiphaga chathamensis Rothschild 1891 Aves Columbidae Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 31 2 365 383 doi 10 1080 03014223 2001 9517659 ISSN 0303 6758 Updates amp Corrections Clements Checklist Cornell Lab of Ornithology Cornell University December 2009 Archived from the original on 16 May 2021 Retrieved 23 January 2020 SPECIES UPDATES Version 1 5 World Bird List International Ornithologists Union 16 January 2008 Archived from the original on 16 May 2021 Retrieved 23 January 2020 a b Goldberg Julia Trewick Steven A Powlesland Ralph G 2011 Population structure and biogeography of Hemiphaga pigeons Aves Columbidae on islands in the New Zealand region Journal of Biogeography 38 2 285 298 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2699 2010 02414 x S2CID 55640412 a b c d Falla R A Sibson R B Turbott E G 1979 The New Guide to the Birds of New Zealand and Outlying Islands Auckland New Zealand Collins ISBN 978 0 00 216928 8 OCLC 6061643 Gibb Gillian C Penny David 2010 Two aspects along the continuum of pigeon evolution A South Pacific radiation and the relationship of pigeons within Neoaves Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 56 2 698 706 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2010 04 016 PMID 20399870 Gill Frank Donsker David eds 2021 Pigeons World Bird List Version 11 2 International Ornithologists Union Archived from the original on 19 October 2021 Retrieved 14 September 2021 a b New Zealand pigeon kereru kuku kukupa Department of Conservation Government of New Zealand Archived from the original on 9 July 2021 Retrieved 3 July 2021 Ward Janelle 2019 Rehabilitation guide for Kereru Wellington New Zealand Department of Conservation ISBN 978 0 473 50912 5 OCLC 1195888312 a b c d e f Carpenter Joanna K Walker Susan Monks Adrian Innes John Binny Rachelle N Schlesselmann Ann Kathrin V 2021 Factors limiting kereru Hemiphaga novaeseelandia populations across New Zealand PDF New Zealand Journal of Ecology 45 2 15 ISSN 0110 6465 Wikidata Q107407131 Archived from the original PDF on 24 June 2021 a b Weaver S 1997 The Call of the Kereru The Question of Customary Use The Contemporary Pacific 9 2 383 398 Archived from the original on 19 February 2022 Retrieved 3 July 2021 a b Emeny Myfanwy T Powlesland Ralph G Henderson Ian M Fordham Robin A 2009 Feeding ecology of kereru Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae in podocarp hardwood forest Whirinaki Forest Park New Zealand New Zealand Journal of Ecology 33 2 114 124 JSTOR 24060614 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 3 July 2021 Help us save the kereru World Wide Fund for Nature New Zealand Archived from the original on 28 September 2021 Retrieved 28 September 2021 Public asked to help with Great Kereru Count Stuff 17 September 2019 Archived from the original on 28 September 2021 Retrieved 28 September 2021 Crewdson Patrick 10 September 2017 Why Stuff is introducing macrons for te reo Maori words Stuff Archived from the original on 17 August 2021 Retrieved 17 August 2021 Nicholls Jenny 23 April 2021 These grumpy old pukeko need to get off the grass Stuff Archived from the original on 17 August 2021 Retrieved 17 August 2021 a b Mills Laura Bayer Kurt 22 February 2013 Drunk kereru fall from trees New Zealand Herald Archived from the original on 1 December 2020 Retrieved 3 July 2021 Clout M N 1990 The kereru and its forests Birds International 2 4 10 19 a b Robertson Hugh A Heather Barrie D 2017 The Hand Guide to the Birds of New Zealand Derek J Onley 3rd ed Auckland New Zealand Penguin Random House New Zealand p 146 ISBN 978 0 14 357093 6 OCLC 917304045 a b Moon Geoff 1988 New Zealand Birds in Focus Auckland New Zealand Weldon New Zealand pp 71 72 ISBN 978 0 86866 120 9 a b c Powlesland Ralph 2017 New Zealand pigeon New Zealand Birds Online Archived from the original on 28 June 2021 Retrieved 24 January 2020 Worthy T H Brassey R 2000 New Zealand pigeon Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae on Raoul Island Kermadec Group PDF Notornis 47 1 36 38 Archived PDF from the original on 16 February 2019 Kereru begin winter wandering Christchurch City Council 16 May 2017 Archived from the original on 3 August 2018 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Clout M N Gaze P D Hay J R Karl B J 1986 Habitat use and spring movements of New Zealand pigeons at Lake Rotoroa Nelson Lakes National Park PDF Notornis 33 37 44 Archived PDF from the original on 18 February 2021 Powlesland Ralph G Moran Less R Wotton Debra M 2011 Satellite tracking of Kereru Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae in Southland New Zealand impacts movements and home range New Zealand Journal of Ecology 35 3 229 235 JSTOR 24060733 Campbell Kirsten L Schotborgh H Maaike Wilson Kerry Jayne Ogilvie Shaun C 2008 Diet of kereru Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae in a rural urban landscape Banks Peninsula New Zealand PDF Notornis 55 173 183 Archived PDF from the original on 28 September 2021 Retrieved 28 September 2021 a b Clout M N Hay J R 1989 The importance of birds as browsers pollinators and seed dispersers in New Zealand forests PDF New Zealand Journal of Ecology 12 s 27 33 Archived PDF from the original on 5 March 2021 a b Clout M N Karl B J Gaze P D 1991 Seasonal movements of New Zealand pigeons from a lowland forest reserve PDF Notornis 38 37 47 Archived PDF from the original on 16 February 2019 a b McEwen W Mary 1978 The food of the New Zealand pigeon Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae PDF New Zealand Journal of Ecology 1 99 108 Archived PDF from the original on 7 March 2021 Clout M N Tilley J A V January 1992 Germination of miro Prumnopitys ferruginea seeds after consumption by New Zealand pigeons Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae New Zealand Journal of Botany 30 1 25 28 doi 10 1080 0028825X 1992 10412882 ISSN 0028 825X Archived from the original on 25 May 2021 Retrieved 3 July 2021 Heather Barrie D Robertson Hugh A 2005 The Field Guide to the Birds of New Zealand PDF Auckland New Zealand Penguin Books pp 348 350 ISBN 978 0 14 302040 0 Archived PDF from the original on 20 August 2021 Retrieved 18 October 2021 Carpenter J Kelly D Clout M Karl B Ladley J 2017 Trends in the detections of a large frugivore Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae and fleshy fruited seed dispersal over three decades New Zealand Journal of Ecology New Zealand Ecological Society 41 1 41 46 doi 10 20417 nzjecol 41 17 JSTOR 26198781 a b c d e Mander Christine Hay Rod Powlesland Ralph 1998 Monitoring and management of kereru Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae PDF Department of Conservation Technical Series 15 1 40 Archived 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Regional Park New Zealand Journal of Ecology 20 1 45 51 JSTOR 24053733 Stephen T Garnett amp Gabriel M Crowley 2000 New Zealand Pigeon Norfolk Island PDF The Action Plan for Australian Birds 2000 Environment Australia Archived from the original PDF on 21 May 2011 Retrieved 8 December 2008 28 Victoriae 1864 No 11 The Wild Birds Protection Act 1864 28 Victoriae 1864 No 11 New Zealand Acts As Enacted NZLII Archived from the original on 20 September 2019 Retrieved 11 October 2021 Gibbs M 2003 Indigenous rights to natural resources in Australia and New Zealand Kereru dugong and pounamu Australasian Journal of Environmental Management 10 3 138 151 doi 10 1080 14486563 2003 10648585 S2CID 153431463 a b Miskelly C M 2014 Legal protection of New Zealand s indigenous terrestrial fauna an historical review PDF Tuhinga 25 25 101 Archived PDF from the original on 19 February 2021 Retrieved 12 June 2020 Feldman James W 2001 3 Enforcement 1922 60 Treaty Rights and Pigeon Poaching Alienation of Maori 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Maori rockshelter sites on Lee Island Lake Te Anau in Southern New Zealand New Zealand Archaeological Association monograph 18 Auckland New Zealand New Zealand Archaeological Association pp 59 65 ISBN 0959791515 OCLC 24578263 New Zealand Conservation Authority 1997 Maori customary use of native birds plants amp other traditional materials Interim report and discussion paper PDF Report Wellington New Zealand New Zealand Conservation Authority ISBN 0 9583301 6 6 Archived PDF from the original on 5 February 2018 Retrieved 12 June 2020 Gillman L 16 August 2016 Len Gillman Sustainable harvest solution to kereru conflict New Zealand Herald Archived from the original on 12 June 2020 Retrieved 12 June 2020 Fuller P 4 September 2018 Dead native birds become tomorrow s taonga Dominion Post Stuff co nz Archived from the original on 12 June 2020 Retrieved 12 June 2020 Pollock Kerryn 20 June 2012 Third series of banknotes 20 Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand Archived from the original on 17 October 2021 Retrieved 17 October 2021 Rosenberg Matthew 15 October 2018 Bird of the Year win follows nationwide census of kereru Stuff Archived from the original on 27 June 2021 Retrieved 27 June 2021 Ainge Roy Eleanor 14 October 2018 New Zealand bird of the year drunk gluttonous kereru pigeon wins The Guardian Retrieved 4 July 2021 Jones Katy 16 June 2019 New Zealand gets to name an exoplanet and its host star Stuff Archived from the original on 18 December 2019 Retrieved 3 July 2021 Distant celestial objects now Kereru and Karaka University of Auckland 18 December 2019 Archived from the original on 19 August 2020 Retrieved 14 October 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae The Kereru Discovery Project a programme for New Zealanders to help arrest the decline of the species through awareness and action in their own gardens The Great Kereru Count Archived 27 June 2021 at the Wayback Machine an annual citizen science project counting kereru throughout New Zealand Project Kereru a voluntary community based conservation project Photo of pigeon trough snare in Te Ara Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kereru amp oldid 1180791476, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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