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Kiwi (Apteryx)

Unlike the name suggest this bird is not the small green fruit that so many people find delectible, instead it is the name of a small bird native to the islands of New Zeland. So popular is the bird that many of the natives of New Zeland have adopted its name as a nick name. 

The Kiwi is a unique bird it cannot fly, has hair like feathers, strong legs and not tail. Kiwi's spend their entire lives on the ground which makes them vulnerable for predeation by cats, dogs, and ferrets all evasive species introduced to New Zeland by white colonists. 

 

There are five species of Kiwi and all of them are endengered: Brown Kiwi, Northland Brown Kiwi, Rowi, Tokoeka, Great Spotted Roroa, and the Little Spotted Kiwi. The Tokoeka Kiwi and the Rowi are the most endangederd species of kiwi in

New Zeland due

to their small pop-

ulation size and

limited number

of populations.

 

                       Kiwi Fun Facts

  • There are approximately 70,000 kiwi left in all of New Zealand.

  • We are losing 2% of our kiwi every year – this equates to 27 per week.

  • Kiwi are mostly nocturnal

  • They are most commonly forest dwellers, making daytime dens and nests in burrows, hollow logs or under dense vegetation.

  • Kiwi are the only bird to have nostrils at the end of its very long bill

  • Their nostils are used to probe in the ground, sniffing out invertebrates to eat, along with some fallen fruit.

  • They also has one of the largest egg-to-body weight ratios of any bird

  • The egg averages 15 per cent of the female's body weight (compared to two per cent for the ostrich).

  • Females are larger than males (up to 3.3 kg and 45 cm).

  • Kiwi are long-lived, and depending on the species live for between 25 and 50 years.

"It is difficult to be certain about the kiwi’s evolutionary history as there are few fossil records – the oldest known fossil is a femur, about 1 million years old and found in coastal deposits near Marton, in the North Island.

Isolated by the changing landscape

New Zealand’s changing landscape and land formation is thought to have influenced the way kiwi evolved. At various times the three main islands of New Zealand (North Island, South Island and Stewart Island) were either joined together, split in different places and into different shapes, or were under water.

As the landscape changed, groups of kiwi became cut off from each other. Because they couldn’t fly, they were kept isolated by physical barriers such as mountains and glaciers, wide rivers and seas, and by harsh terrain, including infertile volcanic soils.

Separated groups could only breed among themselves, sharing a gene pool.

As generations passed, kiwi in each group became increasingly different from kiwi in other groups. Nature selected traits most useful to their local environments and the groups became so different they no longer naturally interbred. Eventually they became separate species altogether.

Changes took millions of years

Researchers think the first species separation happened when the

brown kiwi group separated from the spotted kiwi. The next split

happened somewhere south of Okarito on the West Coast of the

South Island. It is thought that impassable glaciers separated

populations of the ancestral tokoeka. During periods of isolation

in ice ages, the birds south of the glaciers gradually evolved into

the various forms of tokoeka we know today, with Stewart Island

birds separating from the rest about 4 million years ago.

It is thought that the group of birds north of Okarito, now known

as rowi, extended as far north as southern Hawke’s Bay. At one stage of New Zealand’s hisotry the seas strait that divides the North and South Islands ran through the Manawatu Gorge and provided a natural barrier. Rowi remains have been found in pre-European Maori middens in the southern Hawke’s Bay.

Brown kiwi ancestors reached the Taranaki area when sea levels lowered and the two main islands were joined by land. When the islands split again, some birds became isolated on the North Island about 6 million years ago and evolved into today’s brown kiwi species.

At about the same time, the spotted kiwi split into the two species recognised today – great spotted kiwi and little spotted kiwi.

Compared with other bird groups separated for such long periods, the design of kiwi has been remarkably conservative – despite major differences in their genetic make-up, there are only slight physical and behavioural differences between species. For example, for a long time taxonomists didn’t recognise rowi as a separate species because they look remarkably similar to tokoeka, with soft brown plumage, similar calls and shared incubation. It was only when the rowi’s DNA was studied that it became obvious it is a different species." (kiwis for kiwi)

Male North Island Brown Kiwi Song

Track name - Artist name
00:00 / 00:00

"Kiwis for Kiwi." Facts about Kiwi: NZ Native Birds. Department of Conservation, n.d. Web. 02 Oct. 2014

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