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Takahē

The South Island takahē (Porphyrio hochstetteri) is a flightless swamphen indigenous to New Zealand and the largest living member of the rail family. It is often known by the abbreviated name takahē, which it shares with the recently extinct North Island takahē. The two takahē species are also known as notornis.

South Island takahē
Male South Island takahē at Zealandia

Nationally Vulnerable (NZ TCS)[2]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Gruiformes
Family: Rallidae
Genus: Porphyrio
Species:
P. hochstetteri
Binomial name
Porphyrio hochstetteri
(A. B. Meyer, 1883)
  Distribution of the South Island takahē, including sanctuaries
Synonyms
  • Notornis mantelli hochstetteri
  • Porphyrio mantelli hochstetteri

Takahē were hunted extensively by Māori and early European settlers, takahē's bones have been found in middens in the South Island.[3][4] Fossil remains have also been found across the South Island.[3] They were not named and described by Europeans until 1847, and then only from fossil bones. In 1850 a living bird was captured, and three more collected in the 19th century. After another bird was captured in 1898, and no more were to be found, the species was presumed extinct. Fifty years later, however, after a carefully planned search, South Island takahē were dramatically rediscovered in November 1948 by Geoffrey Orbell in an isolated valley in the South Island's Murchison Mountains. The species is now managed by the New Zealand Department of Conservation, whose Takahē Recovery Programme maintains populations on several offshore islands as well as Takahē Valley. Takahē has been reintroduced to numerous locations across the country. Although South Island takahē are still a threatened species, their NZTCS status was downgraded in 2016 from Nationally Critical to Nationally Vulnerable.[2] As of 2023, the population is around 500 and is growing by 8 percent per year.[5]

Scientific description and naming edit

 
The first illustration of the South Island takahē from Gideon and Walter Mantell's notice of the discovery in 1850

Anatomist Richard Owen was sent fossil bird bones found in 1847 in South Taranaki on the North Island by collector Walter Mantell, and in 1848 he coined the genus Notornis ("southern bird") for them, naming the new species Notornis mantelli.[6] The bird was presumed by Western science to be another extinct species like the moa.

Two years later, a group of sealers in Tamatea / Dusky Sound, Fiordland, encountered a large bird which they chased with their dogs. "It ran with great speed, and upon being captured uttered loud screams, and fought and struggled violently; it was kept alive three or four days on board the schooner and then killed, and the body roasted and ate by the crew, each partaking of the dainty, which was declared to be delicious."[7] Walter Mantell happened to meet the sealers, and secured the bird's skin from them. He sent it to his father, palaeontologist Gideon Mantell, who realised this was Notornis, a living bird known only from fossil bones, and presented it in 1850 to a meeting of the Zoological Society of London.[7] A second specimen was sent to Gideon Mantell in 1851, caught by Māori on Secretary Island, Fiordland. (Takahē were well known to Māori, who travelled long distances to hunt them. The bird's name comes from the Māori verb takahi, to stamp or trample.[8])

Only two more South Island takahē were collected by Europeans in the 19th century. One was caught by a rabbiter's dog on the eastern side of Lake Te Anau in 1879. It was bought by what is now the State Museum of Zoology, Dresden, for £105, and destroyed during the bombing of Dresden in World War II.[8] Another takahē was caught by another dog, also on the shore of Lake Te Anau, on 7 August 1898; the dog, named 'Rough', was owned by musterer Jack Ross. Ross tried to revive the female takahē, but it died, and he delivered it to curator William Benham at Otago Museum.[9][10] In excellent condition, it was purchased by the New Zealand government for £250 and was put on display; for many years it was the only mounted specimen in New Zealand, and the only takahē on display anywhere in the world.[8]

After 1898, hunters and settlers continued to report sightings of large blue-and-green birds, described as "giant pukakis" (pūkeko or Australasian swamphens); one group chased but could not catch a bird "the size of a goose, with blue-green feathers and the speed of a racehorse".[11] None of the sightings were authenticated, and the only specimens collected were fossil bones.[12] The takahē was considered extinct.[8]

Taxonomy and systematics edit

 
Notornis hochstetteri, from Meyer's 1883 description

The third takahē collected went to the Königlich Zoologisches und Anthropologisch-Ethnographisches Museum in Dresden, and the Director Adolf Bernhard Meyer examined the skeleton[13] while preparing his classification of the museum's birds, Abbildungen von Vogelskeletten (1879–1895). He decided the skeletal differences between the Fiordland bird and Owen's North Island specimen were sufficient to make it a separate species, which he called Notornis hochstetteri, after the Austrian geologist Ferdinand von Hochstetter.[14]

Over the second half of the 20th century, the two Notornis species were gradually relegated to subspecies: Notornis mantelli mantelli in the North Island, and Notornis mantelli hochstetteri in the South. They were then incorporated into the same genus as the closely related Australasian swamphen or pūkeko (Porphyrio porphyrio), becoming a subspecies of Porphyrio mantelli.[15] Pūkeko are members of a widespread species of swamphen, but based on fossil evidence have only been in New Zealand for a few hundred years, arriving from Australia after the islands were first settled by Polynesians.[15]

A morphological and genetic study of living and extinct Porphyrio revealed that North and South Island takahē were, as originally proposed by Meyer, separate species.[16] The North Island species (P. mantelli, as described by Owen) was known to Māori as moho; it is extinct and only known from skeletal remains and one possible specimen. Moho were taller and more slender than takahē, and share a common ancestor with living pūkeko.[15] Although it was historically proposed that the two takahē species were unrelated, a genetic analysis published in 2024 suggested that both takahē species are each others closest relatives and likely descended from a single ancestor that colonised New Zealand, with the split between the two species dated at around 4 to 1.5 million years ago.[17]

Porphyrio

Allen's gallinule (Porphyrio alleni

Azure gallinule (Porphyrio flavirostris)

American purple gallinule (Porphyrio martinica)

Black-backed swamphen (Porphyrio indicus)

Western swamphen (Porphyrio porphyrio)

African swamphen (Porphyrio madagascariensis)

South Island takahē (Porphyrio hochstetteri)

North Island takahē/Moho (Porphyrio mantelli)

Grey-headed swamphen (Porphyrio poliocephalus)

Philippine swamphen (Porphyrio pulverulentus)

Australasian swamphen (Porphyrio melanotus)

Rediscovery edit

Living South Island takahē were rediscovered in an expedition led by Invercargill-based physician Geoffrey Orbell near Lake Te Anau in the Murchison Mountains, on 20 November 1948.[18] The expedition started when footprints of an unknown bird were found near Lake Te Anau. Two takahē were caught but returned to the wild after photos were taken of the rediscovered bird.[19][18]

Description edit

 
The colour of both female and male adults is mainly purple-blue with a greenish back and inner wings.
 
Two juveniles and two adults (with red beaks) at Orokonui Ecosanctuary

The South Island takahē is the largest living member of the family Rallidae. Its overall length averages 63 cm (25 in) and its average weight is about 2.7 kg (6.0 lb) in males and 2.3 kg (5.1 lb) in females, ranging from 1.8–4.2 kg (4.0–9.3 lb). The lifespan of a takahē can range from 18 years in the wild or 22 in animal sanctuaries.[20] Its standing height is around 50 cm (20 in).[21] It is a stocky, powerful bird, with short strong legs and a massive bill which can deliver a painful bite to the unwary. Although a flightless bird, the takahē sometimes uses its reduced wings to help it clamber up slopes.[21]

South Island takahē plumage, beaks, and legs show typical gallinule colours. Adult takahē plumage is silky, iridescent, and mostly dark-blue or navy-blue on the head, neck, and underside, peacock blue on the wings. The back and inner wings are teal and green, becoming olive-green at the tail, which is white underneath.[21] Takahe have a bright scarlet frontal shield and "carmine beaks marbled with shades of red".[22] Their scarlet legs were described as "crayfish-red" by one of the early rediscoverers.[23]

Sexes are similar; the females are slightly smaller, and may display frayed tail feathers when nesting.[23] Chicks are covered with jet-black fluffy down when hatched, and have very large brown legs, with a dark white-tipped bill.[23] Immature takahē have a duller version of adult colouring, with a dark bill that turns red as they mature.

South Island takahē are noisy. They have a non-directional warning womph call, which was described by the rediscoverers of takahē as someone "whistling to them over a .303 cartridge case",[23] and a loud clowp call. The contact call is easily confused with that of the weka (Gallirallus australis), but is generally more resonant and deeper.[24]

Behaviour and ecology edit

 
Adult feeding a chick

The South Island takahē is a sedentary and flightless bird currently found in alpine grasslands habitats. It is territorial and remains in the grassland until the arrival of snow, when it descends to the forest or scrub. It eats grass, shoots, and insects, but predominantly leaves of Chionochloa tussocks and other alpine grass species.[25] The South Island takahē can often be seen plucking a snow grass (Danthonia flavescens) stalk, taking it into one claw, and eating only the soft lower parts, which appears to be its favourite food, while the rest is discarded.

A South Island takahē has been recorded feeding on a paradise duckling at Zealandia. Although this behaviour was previously unknown, the related Australasian swamphen or pūkeko occasionally feeds on eggs and nestlings of other birds as well.[26]

Breeding edit

The South Island takahē is monogamous, with pairs remaining together from 12 years to, probably, their entire lives. It builds a bulky nest under bushes and scrub, and lays one to three buff eggs. The chick survival rate is between 25% and 80%, depending on location.[27]

Distribution and habitat edit

Although it is indigenous to swamps, humans have turned its swampland habitats into farmland, and the South Island takahē was forced to move upland into the grasslands. The species is still present in the location where it was rediscovered in the Murchison Mountains. Small numbers have also been successfully translocated to five predator-free offshore islands, Tiritiri Matangi, Kapiti, Maud, Mana and Motutapu, where they can be viewed by the public. Additionally, captive takahē can be viewed at Te Anau and Pūkaha / Mount Bruce National wildlife centres. In June 2006 a pair of takahē were relocated to the Maungatautari Restoration Project. In September 2010 a pair of takahē (Hamilton and Guy) were released at Willowbank Wildlife Reserve – the first non-Department of Conservation institution to hold this species. In January 2011 two takahē were released in Zealandia, Wellington, and in mid-2015, two more takahē were released on Rotoroa Island in the Hauraki Gulf. There have also been relocations onto the Tawharanui Peninsula. In 2014 two pairs of Takahe were released into Wairakei golf and sanctuary, a private fenced sanctuary at Wairakei north of Taupō, the first chick was born there in November 2015. At October 2017 there were 347 takahē accounted for, an increase of 41 over 2016.[28] The Orokonui Ecosanctuary is home to a single takahē breeding pair, Quammen and Paku. The pair successfully bred two chicks in 2018, both of which died from exposure after heavy rains in November 2018.[29] The deaths caused some controversy with regards to the Ecosanctuary's policy of "non-interference".[30]

In 2018, eighteen South Island takahē were reintroduced to the Kahurangi National Park, 100 years after their local extinction.[31]

Following the 2018 release, a second re-introduction has taken place on Te Waipounamu in August 2023, eighteen takahē were released in the Upper Whakatipu Waimāori Valley in Ngāi Tahu owned Greenstone Station.[32] Later that year in October, six more takahē were released onto the property.[33]

Status and conservation edit

The near extinction of the formerly widespread South Island takahē is due to a number of factors: over-hunting, loss of habitat and introduced predators have all played a part. The introduction of red deer (Cervus elaphus) represent a severe competition for food, while stoats (Mustela erminea) take a role as predators. The spread of the forests in post-glacial Pleistocene-Holocene has contributed to the reduction of habitat. Since the species is K-selected, i.e. is long-lived, reproduces slowly, takes several years to reach maturity, and had a large range that has drastically contracted in comparatively few generations, inbreeding depression is a significant problem.[34] The recovery efforts are hampered especially by low fertility of the remaining birds. Genetic analyses have been employed to select captive breeding stock in an effort to preserve the maximum genetic diversity.[35]

Decline of takahē edit

The causes of the pre-European decline of takahē were postulated by Williams (1962) and later supported in a detailed report by Mills et al. (1984).[36][37] They held that climate changes were the main cause of the low numbers of takahē before European settlement. The environmental conditions prior to the period of European settlement were not suitable for takahē, and eliminated most of the population. The rising temperatures were not tolerated by this group of birds. Takahē are adapted to alpine grasslands, and the post-glacial era modified those zones, causing a sharp decline in the takahē population.[citation needed]

Secondly, they suggested that Polynesian settlers arriving about 800–1,000 years ago, bringing dogs and Polynesian rats (Rattus exulans) and hunting takahē for food, started another decline. European settlement in the nineteenth century almost wiped them out through hunting and introducing mammals such as deer which competed for food and predators (e.g. stoats) which preyed on them directly. [citation needed]

Takahē population, conservation and protection edit

 
Ringed female South Island takahē at Kapiti Island

After long threats of extinction, South Island takahē now find protection in Fiordland National Park (New Zealand's largest national park). However, the species has not made a stable recovery in this habitat since they were rediscovered in November 1948.[38] In fact, the takahē population was at 400 before it was reduced to 118 in 1982 due to competition with Fiordland domestic deer. Conservationists noticed the threat that deer posed to takahē survival, and the national park has now implemented deer control with hunting by helicopter.[39]

The rediscovery of the South Island takahē caused great public interest. The New Zealand government took immediate action by closing off a remote part of Fiordland National Park to prevent the birds from being bothered. However, at the moment of rediscovery, there were different perspectives on how the bird should be conserved. At first, the Forest and Bird Society advocated for takahē to be left to work out their own "destiny",[citation needed] but many worried that the takahē would be incapable of making a comeback and thus become extinct like New Zealand's native huia. Interventionists then sought to relocate the takahē to "island sanctuaries" and breed them in captivity. Ultimately, no action was taken for nearly a decade due to a lack of resources and a desire to avoid conflict.[citation needed]

The Burwood Takahē Breeding Centre was opened in 1985 at a site near Te Anau.[40] The initial approach was to incubate eggs collected from nests and raise them by hand. Staff used hand-held puppets that replayed sounds of adult contact calls while feeding and interacting with the chicks, to help prevent the birds becoming "imprinted" on humans. Fibreglass replicas of adult birds were also placed in areas where the chicks slept. These methods were not used after 2011.[41]

Biologists from the Department of Conservation drew on their experience with designing remote island sanctuaries to establish a safe habitat for takahē and translocate birds onto Maud Island (Marlborough Sounds), Mana Island (near Wellington), Kapiti Island (Kapiti Coast), and Tiritiri Matangi Island (Hauraki Gulf). The success of these translocations has meant that the takahē's island metapopulation appears to have reached its carrying capacity, as revealed by the increasing ratio of non-breeding to breeding adults and declines in produced offspring. This may lead to reduced population growth rates and increased rates of inbreeding over time, thereby posing problems regarding the maintenance of genetic diversity and thus takahē survival in the long term.[citation needed]

Recently, human intervention has been required to maintain the breeding success of the takahē, which is relatively low in the wild compared to other, less threatened species, so methods such as the removal of infertile eggs from nests and the captive rearing of chicks have been introduced to manage the takahē population. The Fiordland takahē population has a successful degree of reproductive output due to these management methods: the number of chicks per pairing with infertile egg removal and captive rearing is 0.66, compared to 0.43 for regions without any breeding management.[citation needed]

It was reported that several takahē have accidentally been killed by hunters under contract to the Department of Conservation in the course of control measures aimed at reducing populations of the similar-looking pūkeko. One bird was killed in 2009 and four more—equivalent to 5% of the total population—in 2015.[42][43]

Future efforts for protection edit

 
South Island takahē released at Maungatautari Restoration Project ecological island, Waikato District, North Island in June 2006

The original recovery strategies and goals set in the early 1980s, both long-term and short-term, are now well under way.

The programme to move South Island takahē to predator-free island refuges, where the birds also receive supplementary feeding, began in 1984. Takahē can now be found on five small islands; Maud Island (Marlborough Sounds), Mana Island (off Wellington's west coast), Kapiti Island (off Wellington's west coast), Tiritiri Matangi Island (Hauraki Gulf) and Motutapu Island (Hauraki Gulf). The Department of Conservation also runs a captive breeding and rearing programme at the Burwood Breeding Centre near Te Anau which has up to 25 breeding pairs.[41] Chicks are reared with minimal human contact. The offspring of the captive birds are used for new island releases and to add to the wild population in the Murchison Mountains. The Department of Conservation also manages wild takahē nests to boost the birds' recovery.

An important management development has been the stringent control of deer in the Murchison Mountains and other takahē areas of Fiordland National Park. Following the introduction of deer hunting by helicopter, deer numbers have decreased dramatically and alpine vegetation is now recovering from years of heavy browsing. This improvement in its habitat has helped to increase takahē breeding success and survival. As of 2009, ongoing research aims to measure the impact of attacks by stoats and thus decide whether stoats are a significant problem requiring management.[39]

Population edit

One of the original long-term goals was to establish a self-sustaining population of well over 500 South Island takahē. The population stood at 263 at the beginning of 2013. In 2016 the population rose to 306 takahē.[44] In 2017 the population rose to 347—a 13 percent increase from the last year.[28][45] In 2019, it increased to 418.[46] As of 2023, the population is around 500.[5]

References edit

  1. ^ BirdLife International (2020). "Porphyrio hochstetteri". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T22692808A170983662. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-3.RLTS.T22692808A170983662.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Porphyrio hochstetteri". nztcs.org.nz. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
  3. ^ a b Boast, Alexander P. (2019). "A Holocene fossil South Island takahē (Porphyrio hochstetteri) in a high-altitude north-west Nelson cave". Notornis. 66: 34–36.
  4. ^ "Takahe turnaround". Stuff. 12 November 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
  5. ^ a b McClure, Tess (28 August 2023). "Prehistoric bird once thought extinct returns to New Zealand wild". The Guardian.
  6. ^ Owen, R. (1848). "On Dinornis (Part III): containing a description of the skull and beak of that genus, and of the same characteristic parts of Palapteryx, and of two other genera of birds, Notornis and Nestor, forming part of an extensive collection of ornithic remains discovered by Mr Walter Mantell at Waingongoro, North Island of New Zealand". Transactions of the Zoological Society of London 3: 345–378, pls 52–56.
  7. ^ a b Mantell, Gideon Algernon (2010). "V. Notice of the Discovery by Mr. Walter Mantellin the Middle Island of New Zealand, of a Living Specimen of the Notornis, a Bird of the Rail Family, allied to Brachypteryx, and hitherto unknown to Naturalists except in a Fossil State". The Transactions of the Zoological Society of London. 4 (2): 69–72. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.1862.tb08048.x.
  8. ^ a b c d Ballance, Alison A. (2001). "Takahe: the bird that twice came back from the grave". In Lee, William G.; Jamieson, Ian G. (eds.). The Takahe: Fifty Years of Conservation Management and Research. Dunedin, New Zealand: University of Otago Press. pp. 18–22. ISBN 978-1877276019.
  9. ^ Sima, Ellen (10 November 2014). "Rare in all its forms". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 5 December 2018.
  10. ^ The San Francisco Call (21 October 1898). "Rare Bird Caught by Tourist's Dog". Chronicling America. The San Francisco Call. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  11. ^ Grzelewski, Derek (January–March 1999). "Takahe – the bird that came back from the dead". New Zealand Geographic. 41.
  12. ^ Gurr, L. (1952). "A Skeleton of Notornis hochstetteri Meyer from Waitati, Otago, and Notes on Distribution of the Bird in the South Island, N.Z." Transactions and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New Zealand. 80 (1): 19–21.
  13. ^ B.Magee (15 January 1938). "New Zealand's Mystery Bird" (Broadsheet). Otago Daily Times. No. 23400. Allied Press. Otago Daily Times. p. 5. ISSN 0114-426X. Retrieved 18 May 2019. Only, four specimens of: the Notornis are preserved. Two are in the British Museum, another is in the Dresden Museum in Germany
  14. ^ Meyer, Adolf Bernhard (1883). Abbildungen von Vogel-Skeletten. Berlin. pp. 28–30. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.51853. hdl:2027/chi.096066971.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  15. ^ a b c Trewick, Steven A.; Worthy, Trevor H. (2001). "Origins and prehistoric ecology of takahe based on morphometric, molecular, and fossil data". In Lee, William G.; Jamieson, Ian G. (eds.). The Takahe: Fifty Years of Conservation Management and Research. Dunedin, New Zealand: University of Otago Press. pp. 31–48. ISBN 978-1877276019.
  16. ^ Trewick, Steven A. (1996). "Morphology and evolution of two takahe: flightless rails of New Zealand". Journal of Zoology. 238 (2): 221–237. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.1996.tb05391.x.
  17. ^ Verry, Alexander J. F.; Mas‐Carrió, Eduard; Gibb, Gillian C.; Dutoit, Ludovic; Robertson, Bruce C.; Waters, Jonathan M.; Rawlence, Nicolas J. (February 2024). "Ancient mitochondrial genomes unveil the origins and evolutionary history of New Zealand's enigmatic takahē and moho". Molecular Ecology. 33 (3). doi:10.1111/mec.17227. ISSN 0962-1083.
  18. ^ a b "Takahē - back from the brink". RNZ. 28 September 2016. Retrieved 29 April 2024.
  19. ^ "Gained in Telling". Otago Daily Times. 8 January 1949. p. 6. Retrieved 7 April 2019 – via Papers Past.
  20. ^ "Takahē".
  21. ^ a b c Lee, William G.; Jamieson, Ian G. (2001). "Introduction". In Lee, William G.; Jamieson, Ian G. (eds.). The Takahe: Fifty Years of Conservation Management and Research. Dunedin, New Zealand: University of Otago Press. pp. 11–17. ISBN 978-1877276019.
  22. ^ Grzelewski, Derek (May–June 2012). "Great experimentations". New Zealand Geographic. 115.
  23. ^ a b c d Watson (née Telfer), Joan L. (2001). "Notornis Rediviva". In Lee, William G.; Jamieson, Ian G. (eds.). The Takahe: Fifty Years of Conservation Management and Research. Dunedin, New Zealand: University of Otago Press. pp. 23–30. ISBN 978-1877276019.
  24. ^ del Hoyo, J. Elliott, A. & Sargatal, J. (editors). (1996) Handbook of the Birds of the World. Volume 3: Hoatzin to Auks. Lynx Edicions. ISBN 84-87334-20-2
  25. ^ Mills, J. A.; Mark, A. F. (1977). "Food Preferences of Takahe in Fiordland National Park, New Zealand, and the Effect of Competition from Introduced Red Deer". Journal of Animal Ecology. 46 (3): 939–958. Bibcode:1977JAnEc..46..939M. doi:10.2307/3651. JSTOR 3651.
  26. ^ Easton, Paul (30 November 2011). "It's a bird eat bird world". Stuff. Retrieved 7 June 2021.
  27. ^ "Takahē and the Takahē Recovery Programme Fact Sheet, 2018–2019" (PDF). Department of Conservation. 2019. p. 1. Retrieved 4 July 2020.
  28. ^ a b "Takahē population 100 breeding pairs strong". www.doc.govt.nz.
  29. ^ Edwards, Jono (27 November 2018). "Orokonui takahe chicks victims of flood". Otago Daily Times Online News.
  30. ^ Edwards, Jono (29 November 2018). "Department of Conservation blames 'bad parenting' for deaths of takahe chicks" – via www.nzherald.co.nz.
  31. ^ "First population of takahē outside of Fiordland released into wild". Stuff. 20 March 2018.
  32. ^ "New Wild Home For Takahē On Ngāi Tahu Whenua In Ōtākou/Otago". www.scoop.co.nz. Department of Conservation. 25 August 2023. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  33. ^ Pattemore, Lauren (17 November 2023). "Takahē breeding success - five nests in Greenstone Valley". Crux. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
  34. ^ Grueber, Catherine E.; Laws, Rebecca J.; Nakagawa, Shinichi; Jamieson, Ian G. (11 November 2010). "Inbreeding Depression Accumulation across Life-History Stages of the Endangered Takahe". Conservation Biology. 24 (6): 1617–1625. Bibcode:2010ConBi..24.1617G. doi:10.1111/j.1523-1739.2010.01549.x. ISSN 0888-8892. PMID 20586788. S2CID 19498813.
  35. ^ BirdLife International 2009. Species factsheet: Porphyrio hochstetteri. Retrieved 1 December 2009.
  36. ^ Williams, G.R. (1962) The Takahe (Notornis mantelli Owen 1848); a general survey. Trans. Royal Soc. New Zealand 88:235–258.
  37. ^ Mills, J.A. Lavers, R.B. & Lee, W.G. (1984) The Takahe: A relict of the Pleistocene grassland avifauna of New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Ecology 7:57–70.
  38. ^ Grant, David (1 May 2015). "Southland region - Plants and animals". Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 28 March 2024.
  39. ^ a b C Wickes; Dave Crouchley; Jane Maxwell (September 2009). "Takahe (Porphyrio hochstetteri) recovery plan: 2007-2012" (PDF). Threatened species recovery plan series. 61: 58. ISSN 1170-3806. Wikidata Q110612077.
  40. ^ Jamieson, Debbie (5 November 2023). "New Wakatipu home a 'last throw of the dice' for struggling takahē". The Press. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
  41. ^ a b "Takahē conservation efforts". Science Learning Hub – Pokapū Akoranga Pūtaiao. Retrieved 7 June 2021.
  42. ^ "Takahe shot in case of mistaken identity". Stuff. 31 January 2009.
  43. ^ Elle Hunt (21 August 2015). "New Zealand hunters apologise over accidental shooting of takahē". The Guardian.
  44. ^ "Takahē population crosses 300 milestone". Department of Conservation. 2 December 2016. Retrieved 28 March 2017.
  45. ^ "Takahe numbers rise". New Zealand Herald. 15 November 2017.
  46. ^ "Takahē population flying high". www.doc.govt.nz. 4 October 2019. Retrieved 7 June 2021.

External links edit

  • Explore Species: South Island Takahe at eBird (Cornell Lab of Ornithology)
  • The Official Takahē Recovery Website

takahē, related, species, north, island, takahē, notornis, redirects, here, journal, notornis, journal, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, . For the related species see North Island takahe Notornis redirects here For the journal see Notornis journal This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Takahe news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message The South Island takahe Porphyrio hochstetteri is a flightless swamphen indigenous to New Zealand and the largest living member of the rail family It is often known by the abbreviated name takahe which it shares with the recently extinct North Island takahe The two takahe species are also known as notornis South Island takahe Male South Island takahe at Zealandia Conservation status Endangered IUCN 3 1 1 Nationally Vulnerable NZ TCS 2 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Aves Order Gruiformes Family Rallidae Genus Porphyrio Species P hochstetteri Binomial name Porphyrio hochstetteri A B Meyer 1883 Distribution of the South Island takahe including sanctuaries Synonyms Notornis mantelli hochstetteri Porphyrio mantelli hochstetteri Takahe were hunted extensively by Maori and early European settlers takahe s bones have been found in middens in the South Island 3 4 Fossil remains have also been found across the South Island 3 They were not named and described by Europeans until 1847 and then only from fossil bones In 1850 a living bird was captured and three more collected in the 19th century After another bird was captured in 1898 and no more were to be found the species was presumed extinct Fifty years later however after a carefully planned search South Island takahe were dramatically rediscovered in November 1948 by Geoffrey Orbell in an isolated valley in the South Island s Murchison Mountains The species is now managed by the New Zealand Department of Conservation whose Takahe Recovery Programme maintains populations on several offshore islands as well as Takahe Valley Takahe has been reintroduced to numerous locations across the country Although South Island takahe are still a threatened species their NZTCS status was downgraded in 2016 from Nationally Critical to Nationally Vulnerable 2 As of 2023 the population is around 500 and is growing by 8 percent per year 5 Contents 1 Scientific description and naming 2 Taxonomy and systematics 3 Rediscovery 4 Description 5 Behaviour and ecology 5 1 Breeding 6 Distribution and habitat 7 Status and conservation 7 1 Decline of takahe 7 2 Takahe population conservation and protection 7 3 Future efforts for protection 8 Population 9 References 10 External linksScientific description and naming edit nbsp The first illustration of the South Island takahe from Gideon and Walter Mantell s notice of the discovery in 1850 Anatomist Richard Owen was sent fossil bird bones found in 1847 in South Taranaki on the North Island by collector Walter Mantell and in 1848 he coined the genus Notornis southern bird for them naming the new species Notornis mantelli 6 The bird was presumed by Western science to be another extinct species like the moa Two years later a group of sealers in Tamatea Dusky Sound Fiordland encountered a large bird which they chased with their dogs It ran with great speed and upon being captured uttered loud screams and fought and struggled violently it was kept alive three or four days on board the schooner and then killed and the body roasted and ate by the crew each partaking of the dainty which was declared to be delicious 7 Walter Mantell happened to meet the sealers and secured the bird s skin from them He sent it to his father palaeontologist Gideon Mantell who realised this was Notornis a living bird known only from fossil bones and presented it in 1850 to a meeting of the Zoological Society of London 7 A second specimen was sent to Gideon Mantell in 1851 caught by Maori on Secretary Island Fiordland Takahe were well known to Maori who travelled long distances to hunt them The bird s name comes from the Maori verb takahi to stamp or trample 8 Only two more South Island takahe were collected by Europeans in the 19th century One was caught by a rabbiter s dog on the eastern side of Lake Te Anau in 1879 It was bought by what is now the State Museum of Zoology Dresden for 105 and destroyed during the bombing of Dresden in World War II 8 Another takahe was caught by another dog also on the shore of Lake Te Anau on 7 August 1898 the dog named Rough was owned by musterer Jack Ross Ross tried to revive the female takahe but it died and he delivered it to curator William Benham at Otago Museum 9 10 In excellent condition it was purchased by the New Zealand government for 250 and was put on display for many years it was the only mounted specimen in New Zealand and the only takahe on display anywhere in the world 8 After 1898 hunters and settlers continued to report sightings of large blue and green birds described as giant pukakis pukeko or Australasian swamphens one group chased but could not catch a bird the size of a goose with blue green feathers and the speed of a racehorse 11 None of the sightings were authenticated and the only specimens collected were fossil bones 12 The takahe was considered extinct 8 Taxonomy and systematics edit nbsp Notornis hochstetteri from Meyer s 1883 description The third takahe collected went to the Koniglich Zoologisches und Anthropologisch Ethnographisches Museum in Dresden and the Director Adolf Bernhard Meyer examined the skeleton 13 while preparing his classification of the museum s birds Abbildungen von Vogelskeletten 1879 1895 He decided the skeletal differences between the Fiordland bird and Owen s North Island specimen were sufficient to make it a separate species which he called Notornis hochstetteri after the Austrian geologist Ferdinand von Hochstetter 14 Over the second half of the 20th century the two Notornis species were gradually relegated to subspecies Notornis mantelli mantelli in the North Island and Notornis mantelli hochstetteri in the South They were then incorporated into the same genus as the closely related Australasian swamphen or pukeko Porphyrio porphyrio becoming a subspecies of Porphyrio mantelli 15 Pukeko are members of a widespread species of swamphen but based on fossil evidence have only been in New Zealand for a few hundred years arriving from Australia after the islands were first settled by Polynesians 15 A morphological and genetic study of living and extinct Porphyrio revealed that North and South Island takahe were as originally proposed by Meyer separate species 16 The North Island species P mantelli as described by Owen was known to Maori as moho it is extinct and only known from skeletal remains and one possible specimen Moho were taller and more slender than takahe and share a common ancestor with living pukeko 15 Although it was historically proposed that the two takahe species were unrelated a genetic analysis published in 2024 suggested that both takahe species are each others closest relatives and likely descended from a single ancestor that colonised New Zealand with the split between the two species dated at around 4 to 1 5 million years ago 17 Porphyrio Allen s gallinule Porphyrio alleni Azure gallinule Porphyrio flavirostris American purple gallinule Porphyrio martinica Black backed swamphen Porphyrio indicus Western swamphen Porphyrio porphyrio African swamphen Porphyrio madagascariensis South Island takahe Porphyrio hochstetteri North Island takahe Moho Porphyrio mantelli Grey headed swamphen Porphyrio poliocephalus Philippine swamphen Porphyrio pulverulentus Australasian swamphen Porphyrio melanotus Rediscovery editLiving South Island takahe were rediscovered in an expedition led by Invercargill based physician Geoffrey Orbell near Lake Te Anau in the Murchison Mountains on 20 November 1948 18 The expedition started when footprints of an unknown bird were found near Lake Te Anau Two takahe were caught but returned to the wild after photos were taken of the rediscovered bird 19 18 Description edit nbsp The colour of both female and male adults is mainly purple blue with a greenish back and inner wings nbsp Two juveniles and two adults with red beaks at Orokonui Ecosanctuary The South Island takahe is the largest living member of the family Rallidae Its overall length averages 63 cm 25 in and its average weight is about 2 7 kg 6 0 lb in males and 2 3 kg 5 1 lb in females ranging from 1 8 4 2 kg 4 0 9 3 lb The lifespan of a takahe can range from 18 years in the wild or 22 in animal sanctuaries 20 Its standing height is around 50 cm 20 in 21 It is a stocky powerful bird with short strong legs and a massive bill which can deliver a painful bite to the unwary Although a flightless bird the takahe sometimes uses its reduced wings to help it clamber up slopes 21 South Island takahe plumage beaks and legs show typical gallinule colours Adult takahe plumage is silky iridescent and mostly dark blue or navy blue on the head neck and underside peacock blue on the wings The back and inner wings are teal and green becoming olive green at the tail which is white underneath 21 Takahe have a bright scarlet frontal shield and carmine beaks marbled with shades of red 22 Their scarlet legs were described as crayfish red by one of the early rediscoverers 23 Sexes are similar the females are slightly smaller and may display frayed tail feathers when nesting 23 Chicks are covered with jet black fluffy down when hatched and have very large brown legs with a dark white tipped bill 23 Immature takahe have a duller version of adult colouring with a dark bill that turns red as they mature South Island takahe are noisy They have a non directional warning womph call which was described by the rediscoverers of takahe as someone whistling to them over a 303 cartridge case 23 and a loud clowp call The contact call is easily confused with that of the weka Gallirallus australis but is generally more resonant and deeper 24 Behaviour and ecology edit nbsp Adult feeding a chick The South Island takahe is a sedentary and flightless bird currently found in alpine grasslands habitats It is territorial and remains in the grassland until the arrival of snow when it descends to the forest or scrub It eats grass shoots and insects but predominantly leaves of Chionochloa tussocks and other alpine grass species 25 The South Island takahe can often be seen plucking a snow grass Danthonia flavescens stalk taking it into one claw and eating only the soft lower parts which appears to be its favourite food while the rest is discarded A South Island takahe has been recorded feeding on a paradise duckling at Zealandia Although this behaviour was previously unknown the related Australasian swamphen or pukeko occasionally feeds on eggs and nestlings of other birds as well 26 Breeding edit The South Island takahe is monogamous with pairs remaining together from 12 years to probably their entire lives It builds a bulky nest under bushes and scrub and lays one to three buff eggs The chick survival rate is between 25 and 80 depending on location 27 Distribution and habitat editAlthough it is indigenous to swamps humans have turned its swampland habitats into farmland and the South Island takahe was forced to move upland into the grasslands The species is still present in the location where it was rediscovered in the Murchison Mountains Small numbers have also been successfully translocated to five predator free offshore islands Tiritiri Matangi Kapiti Maud Mana and Motutapu where they can be viewed by the public Additionally captive takahe can be viewed at Te Anau and Pukaha Mount Bruce National wildlife centres In June 2006 a pair of takahe were relocated to the Maungatautari Restoration Project In September 2010 a pair of takahe Hamilton and Guy were released at Willowbank Wildlife Reserve the first non Department of Conservation institution to hold this species In January 2011 two takahe were released in Zealandia Wellington and in mid 2015 two more takahe were released on Rotoroa Island in the Hauraki Gulf There have also been relocations onto the Tawharanui Peninsula In 2014 two pairs of Takahe were released into Wairakei golf and sanctuary a private fenced sanctuary at Wairakei north of Taupō the first chick was born there in November 2015 At October 2017 there were 347 takahe accounted for an increase of 41 over 2016 28 The Orokonui Ecosanctuary is home to a single takahe breeding pair Quammen and Paku The pair successfully bred two chicks in 2018 both of which died from exposure after heavy rains in November 2018 29 The deaths caused some controversy with regards to the Ecosanctuary s policy of non interference 30 In 2018 eighteen South Island takahe were reintroduced to the Kahurangi National Park 100 years after their local extinction 31 Following the 2018 release a second re introduction has taken place on Te Waipounamu in August 2023 eighteen takahe were released in the Upper Whakatipu Waimaori Valley in Ngai Tahu owned Greenstone Station 32 Later that year in October six more takahe were released onto the property 33 Status and conservation editThe near extinction of the formerly widespread South Island takahe is due to a number of factors over hunting loss of habitat and introduced predators have all played a part The introduction of red deer Cervus elaphus represent a severe competition for food while stoats Mustela erminea take a role as predators The spread of the forests in post glacial Pleistocene Holocene has contributed to the reduction of habitat Since the species is K selected i e is long lived reproduces slowly takes several years to reach maturity and had a large range that has drastically contracted in comparatively few generations inbreeding depression is a significant problem 34 The recovery efforts are hampered especially by low fertility of the remaining birds Genetic analyses have been employed to select captive breeding stock in an effort to preserve the maximum genetic diversity 35 Decline of takahe edit The causes of the pre European decline of takahe were postulated by Williams 1962 and later supported in a detailed report by Mills et al 1984 36 37 They held that climate changes were the main cause of the low numbers of takahe before European settlement The environmental conditions prior to the period of European settlement were not suitable for takahe and eliminated most of the population The rising temperatures were not tolerated by this group of birds Takahe are adapted to alpine grasslands and the post glacial era modified those zones causing a sharp decline in the takahe population citation needed Secondly they suggested that Polynesian settlers arriving about 800 1 000 years ago bringing dogs and Polynesian rats Rattus exulans and hunting takahe for food started another decline European settlement in the nineteenth century almost wiped them out through hunting and introducing mammals such as deer which competed for food and predators e g stoats which preyed on them directly citation needed Takahe population conservation and protection edit nbsp Ringed female South Island takahe at Kapiti Island After long threats of extinction South Island takahe now find protection in Fiordland National Park New Zealand s largest national park However the species has not made a stable recovery in this habitat since they were rediscovered in November 1948 38 In fact the takahe population was at 400 before it was reduced to 118 in 1982 due to competition with Fiordland domestic deer Conservationists noticed the threat that deer posed to takahe survival and the national park has now implemented deer control with hunting by helicopter 39 The rediscovery of the South Island takahe caused great public interest The New Zealand government took immediate action by closing off a remote part of Fiordland National Park to prevent the birds from being bothered However at the moment of rediscovery there were different perspectives on how the bird should be conserved At first the Forest and Bird Society advocated for takahe to be left to work out their own destiny citation needed but many worried that the takahe would be incapable of making a comeback and thus become extinct like New Zealand s native huia Interventionists then sought to relocate the takahe to island sanctuaries and breed them in captivity Ultimately no action was taken for nearly a decade due to a lack of resources and a desire to avoid conflict citation needed The Burwood Takahe Breeding Centre was opened in 1985 at a site near Te Anau 40 The initial approach was to incubate eggs collected from nests and raise them by hand Staff used hand held puppets that replayed sounds of adult contact calls while feeding and interacting with the chicks to help prevent the birds becoming imprinted on humans Fibreglass replicas of adult birds were also placed in areas where the chicks slept These methods were not used after 2011 41 Biologists from the Department of Conservation drew on their experience with designing remote island sanctuaries to establish a safe habitat for takahe and translocate birds onto Maud Island Marlborough Sounds Mana Island near Wellington Kapiti Island Kapiti Coast and Tiritiri Matangi Island Hauraki Gulf The success of these translocations has meant that the takahe s island metapopulation appears to have reached its carrying capacity as revealed by the increasing ratio of non breeding to breeding adults and declines in produced offspring This may lead to reduced population growth rates and increased rates of inbreeding over time thereby posing problems regarding the maintenance of genetic diversity and thus takahe survival in the long term citation needed Recently human intervention has been required to maintain the breeding success of the takahe which is relatively low in the wild compared to other less threatened species so methods such as the removal of infertile eggs from nests and the captive rearing of chicks have been introduced to manage the takahe population The Fiordland takahe population has a successful degree of reproductive output due to these management methods the number of chicks per pairing with infertile egg removal and captive rearing is 0 66 compared to 0 43 for regions without any breeding management citation needed It was reported that several takahe have accidentally been killed by hunters under contract to the Department of Conservation in the course of control measures aimed at reducing populations of the similar looking pukeko One bird was killed in 2009 and four more equivalent to 5 of the total population in 2015 42 43 Future efforts for protection edit nbsp South Island takahe released at Maungatautari Restoration Project ecological island Waikato District North Island in June 2006 The original recovery strategies and goals set in the early 1980s both long term and short term are now well under way The programme to move South Island takahe to predator free island refuges where the birds also receive supplementary feeding began in 1984 Takahe can now be found on five small islands Maud Island Marlborough Sounds Mana Island off Wellington s west coast Kapiti Island off Wellington s west coast Tiritiri Matangi Island Hauraki Gulf and Motutapu Island Hauraki Gulf The Department of Conservation also runs a captive breeding and rearing programme at the Burwood Breeding Centre near Te Anau which has up to 25 breeding pairs 41 Chicks are reared with minimal human contact The offspring of the captive birds are used for new island releases and to add to the wild population in the Murchison Mountains The Department of Conservation also manages wild takahe nests to boost the birds recovery An important management development has been the stringent control of deer in the Murchison Mountains and other takahe areas of Fiordland National Park Following the introduction of deer hunting by helicopter deer numbers have decreased dramatically and alpine vegetation is now recovering from years of heavy browsing This improvement in its habitat has helped to increase takahe breeding success and survival As of 2009 ongoing research aims to measure the impact of attacks by stoats and thus decide whether stoats are a significant problem requiring management 39 Population editOne of the original long term goals was to establish a self sustaining population of well over 500 South Island takahe The population stood at 263 at the beginning of 2013 In 2016 the population rose to 306 takahe 44 In 2017 the population rose to 347 a 13 percent increase from the last year 28 45 In 2019 it increased to 418 46 As of 2023 the population is around 500 5 References edit BirdLife International 2020 Porphyrio hochstetteri IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T22692808A170983662 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 3 RLTS T22692808A170983662 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 a b Porphyrio hochstetteri nztcs org nz Retrieved 16 February 2020 a b Boast Alexander P 2019 A Holocene fossil South Island takahe Porphyrio hochstetteri in a high altitude north west Nelson cave Notornis 66 34 36 Takahe turnaround Stuff 12 November 2012 Retrieved 1 April 2024 a b McClure Tess 28 August 2023 Prehistoric bird once thought extinct returns to New Zealand wild The Guardian Owen R 1848 On Dinornis Part III containing a description of the skull and beak of that genus and of the same characteristic parts of Palapteryx and of two other genera of birds Notornis and Nestor forming part of an extensive collection of ornithic remains discovered by Mr Walter Mantell at Waingongoro North Island of New Zealand Transactions of the Zoological Society of London 3 345 378 pls 52 56 a b Mantell Gideon Algernon 2010 V Notice of the Discovery by Mr Walter Mantellin the Middle Island of New Zealand of a Living Specimen of the Notornis a Bird of the Rail Family allied to Brachypteryx and hitherto unknown to Naturalists except in a Fossil State The Transactions of the Zoological Society of London 4 2 69 72 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1862 tb08048 x a b c d Ballance Alison A 2001 Takahe the bird that twice came back from the grave In Lee William G Jamieson Ian G eds The Takahe Fifty Years of Conservation Management and Research Dunedin New Zealand University of Otago Press pp 18 22 ISBN 978 1877276019 Sima Ellen 10 November 2014 Rare in all its forms Otago Daily Times Retrieved 5 December 2018 The San Francisco Call 21 October 1898 Rare Bird Caught by Tourist s Dog Chronicling America The San Francisco Call Retrieved 21 July 2022 Grzelewski Derek January March 1999 Takahe the bird that came back from the dead New Zealand Geographic 41 Gurr L 1952 A Skeleton of Notornis hochstetteri Meyer from Waitati Otago and Notes on Distribution of the Bird in the South Island N Z Transactions and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New Zealand 80 1 19 21 B Magee 15 January 1938 New Zealand s Mystery Bird Broadsheet Otago Daily Times No 23400 Allied Press Otago Daily Times p 5 ISSN 0114 426X Retrieved 18 May 2019 Only four specimens of the Notornis are preserved Two are in the British Museum another is in the Dresden Museum in Germany Meyer Adolf Bernhard 1883 Abbildungen von Vogel Skeletten Berlin pp 28 30 doi 10 5962 bhl title 51853 hdl 2027 chi 096066971 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c Trewick Steven A Worthy Trevor H 2001 Origins and prehistoric ecology of takahe based on morphometric molecular and fossil data In Lee William G Jamieson Ian G eds The Takahe Fifty Years of Conservation Management and Research Dunedin New Zealand University of Otago Press pp 31 48 ISBN 978 1877276019 Trewick Steven A 1996 Morphology and evolution of two takahe flightless rails of New Zealand Journal of Zoology 238 2 221 237 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1996 tb05391 x Verry Alexander J F Mas Carrio Eduard Gibb Gillian C Dutoit Ludovic Robertson Bruce C Waters Jonathan M Rawlence Nicolas J February 2024 Ancient mitochondrial genomes unveil the origins and evolutionary history of New Zealand s enigmatic takahe and moho Molecular Ecology 33 3 doi 10 1111 mec 17227 ISSN 0962 1083 a b Takahe back from the brink RNZ 28 September 2016 Retrieved 29 April 2024 Gained in Telling Otago Daily Times 8 January 1949 p 6 Retrieved 7 April 2019 via Papers Past Takahe a b c Lee William G Jamieson Ian G 2001 Introduction In Lee William G Jamieson Ian G eds The Takahe Fifty Years of Conservation Management and Research Dunedin New Zealand University of Otago Press pp 11 17 ISBN 978 1877276019 Grzelewski Derek May June 2012 Great experimentations New Zealand Geographic 115 a b c d Watson nee Telfer Joan L 2001 Notornis Rediviva In Lee William G Jamieson Ian G eds The Takahe Fifty Years of Conservation Management and Research Dunedin New Zealand University of Otago Press pp 23 30 ISBN 978 1877276019 del Hoyo J Elliott A amp Sargatal J editors 1996 Handbook of the Birds of the World Volume 3 Hoatzin to Auks Lynx Edicions ISBN 84 87334 20 2 Mills J A Mark A F 1977 Food Preferences of Takahe in Fiordland National Park New Zealand and the Effect of Competition from Introduced Red Deer Journal of Animal Ecology 46 3 939 958 Bibcode 1977JAnEc 46 939M doi 10 2307 3651 JSTOR 3651 Easton Paul 30 November 2011 It s a bird eat bird world Stuff Retrieved 7 June 2021 Takahe and the Takahe Recovery Programme Fact Sheet 2018 2019 PDF Department of Conservation 2019 p 1 Retrieved 4 July 2020 a b Takahe population 100 breeding pairs strong www doc govt nz Edwards Jono 27 November 2018 Orokonui takahe chicks victims of flood Otago Daily Times Online News Edwards Jono 29 November 2018 Department of Conservation blames bad parenting for deaths of takahe chicks via www nzherald co nz First population of takahe outside of Fiordland released into wild Stuff 20 March 2018 New Wild Home For Takahe On Ngai Tahu Whenua In Ōtakou Otago www scoop co nz Department of Conservation 25 August 2023 Retrieved 29 August 2023 Pattemore Lauren 17 November 2023 Takahe breeding success five nests in Greenstone Valley Crux Retrieved 1 April 2024 Grueber Catherine E Laws Rebecca J Nakagawa Shinichi Jamieson Ian G 11 November 2010 Inbreeding Depression Accumulation across Life History Stages of the Endangered Takahe Conservation Biology 24 6 1617 1625 Bibcode 2010ConBi 24 1617G doi 10 1111 j 1523 1739 2010 01549 x ISSN 0888 8892 PMID 20586788 S2CID 19498813 BirdLife International 2009 Species factsheet Porphyrio hochstetteri Retrieved 1 December 2009 Williams G R 1962 The Takahe Notornis mantelli Owen 1848 a general survey Trans Royal Soc New Zealand 88 235 258 Mills J A Lavers R B amp Lee W G 1984 The Takahe A relict of the Pleistocene grassland avifauna of New Zealand New Zealand Journal of Ecology 7 57 70 Grant David 1 May 2015 Southland region Plants and animals Te Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 28 March 2024 a b C Wickes Dave Crouchley Jane Maxwell September 2009 Takahe Porphyrio hochstetteri recovery plan 2007 2012 PDF Threatened species recovery plan series 61 58 ISSN 1170 3806 Wikidata Q110612077 Jamieson Debbie 5 November 2023 New Wakatipu home a last throw of the dice for struggling takahe The Press Retrieved 1 April 2024 a b Takahe conservation efforts Science Learning Hub Pokapu Akoranga Putaiao Retrieved 7 June 2021 Takahe shot in case of mistaken identity Stuff 31 January 2009 Elle Hunt 21 August 2015 New Zealand hunters apologise over accidental shooting of takahe The Guardian Takahe population crosses 300 milestone Department of Conservation 2 December 2016 Retrieved 28 March 2017 Takahe numbers rise New Zealand Herald 15 November 2017 Takahe population flying high www doc govt nz 4 October 2019 Retrieved 7 June 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Porphyrio hochstetteri nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Porphyrio hochstetteri Explore Species South Island Takahe at eBird Cornell Lab of Ornithology The Official Takahe Recovery Website Portals nbsp Birds nbsp New Zealand Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Takahe amp oldid 1221314487, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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