Location
SPREP LIBRARY
Publisher
Department of Conservation (DOC)
Publication Year:
2008
Publication Place
Wellington, New Zealand
Physical Description:
19 p. ; 29 cm
Call Number
[EL]
Material Type
Language
English
Record ID:
88
Legacy PEIN ID:
74993
General Notes
Available online
Available online
Subject Heading(s)
Fauna - Conservation - Cook Islands
Environment - Cook Islands
Fauna - Scientific Research - Cook Islands
Abstract
In 1989, the kakerori (Pomarea dimidiata) was one of the 10 rarest birds in the world with a declining population of just 29 individuals living in forested hill country in the Takitumu Conservation Area (TCA) of south-eastern Rarotonga, Cook Islands. Following 12 years of rat poisoning, the population had increased to 255 birds in August 2001. The programme then shifted from species recovery to sustainable management of the Rarotonga population at 250 to 300 birds. The rat poisoning effort was reduced, and an insurance population was established on Atiu. By August 2004, following the reduction of poisoning from weekly to fortnightly, and the transfer of 30 youngsters to Atiu in 200103, there were 281 birds on Rarotonga and 25 on Atiu. The southern Cook Islands were hit by five tropical cyclones in a four-week period in FebruaryMarch 2005, and forests on Rarotonga were severely damaged. Kakerori survived the storms remarkably well, but the main effect was observed in the following breeding season (2005/06), when nesting success on Rarotonga was exceptionally poor. Reduced canopy cover caused nests to be exposed to abnormally wet conditions, and lack of fruit meant that rats were exceptionally hungry. Only 31 yearlings were known to be alive in August 2006about half the expected numberand annual mortality of banded birds (25%) was the highest since management began. The kakerori population on Rarotonga fell 8% from 275 birds in August 2005 to a minimum of 254 birds in August 2006. The situation was better on Atiu, with the population growing from about 32 adult birds in 2005/06 to a minimum of 37 adult birds in 2006/07, and an Atiu-bred pair nested successfully for the first time. The 2006/07 breeding season on Rarotonga was moderately successful, with a minimum of 51 fledglings found. Because the sustainable management regime of fortnightly rat poisoning in the TCA was only just adequate in giving protection to adult kakerori, the annual poisoning programme was modified by adding rounds of interim poisoning in April and July 2007 aimed at reducing rat and cat numbers before the breeding season.
Location
SPREP LIBRARY
Publisher
Department of Conservation (DOC)
Publication Year:
2008
Publication Place
Wellington, New Zealand
Physical Description:
19 p. ; 29 cm
Call Number
[EL]
Material Type
Language
English
Record ID:
88
Legacy PEIN ID:
74993
General Notes
Available online
Record Created: 01-Sep-2008
Record Modified: 09-Dec-2021