On Mainland New Zealand, Crafty Kkp Are Thwarting Reintroduction Efforts

Ten of the critically endangered parrots were released into a sanctuary in 2023 with hopes of eventually establishing a wild population. The only problem? The birds keep escaping.
A bright green kakapo emerges from a bag on the ground held open by a person's hands.
Kkp Motupohue released at Sanctuary Mountain Maungatautari in July. Photo: Peter Drury

In the wee hours of the morning on January 2, 2024, a driver spotted a bird sitting in the middle of a rural road in New Zealand. Fortunately, the startled driver realized that the fluffy green mound was a Kkp, a critically endangered parrot endemic to the country, and he quickly called the Department of Conservations hotline to report the sighting. Within a few hours, rangers safely returned Elwin the Kkp to Sanctuary Mountain Maungatautari (SMM)the birds home since September 2023.

Elwin, a 15-year-old male, was one of two cohorts of 10 male Kkp translocated from Whenua Hou (Codfish Island), a southern offshore island, to SMM on New Zealands North Island in and as a part of the species long-term recovery plan. The reintroductions mark a huge achievement for the effort: the first time the largely flightless birds have lived in mainland New Zealand in nearly , and the first time Kkp have lived wild there in more than 100 years.

To know that weve got Kkp out on the mountain is pretty special and also feels like quite a responsibility, says Janelle Ward, the biodiversity team leader at SMM. We really want them to be healthy and settle in well and to be safe here. But since being released, 6 of the 10 birds have earned return flights to Whenua Hou after venturing beyond the 8,310-acre sanctuarys enclosure or showing signs of possible escape. Four Kkptepoti, Bunker, Taeatanga, and Tautahiremain at the sanctuary, where undeterred researchers still hope dozens or even hundreds will one day roam. 

Kkp, a culturally important species for the iwi, or Mori tribes, of Aotearoa (New Zealand), once thrived in dense forests across the countrys three main islands, where males set up leks on peaks and boomed loudly to attract females. The arrival of humans and the introduction of non-native species, like stoats, rats, and feral cats, decimated their population. Nearly extinct since the 1990s, when just , Kkp are now a global conservation success story.

Until recently, however, the entire population of 247 individuals lived on southern offshore islands, protected from the onslaught of invasive predators elsewhere in New Zealand. But the population has exploded in the past decadedoubling since 2016 aloneforcing the team to look for other safe havens for Kkp. We didnt expect it to grow that fast, and suddenly weve got this situation where our main breeding islands are full, says Andrew Digby, the lead biologist with the Kkp Recovery group, whos worked with the endangered species for the past 10 years.

The Kkp Recovery group flagged SMM as one of the only suitable places on the mainlandbasically an oasis of native vegetation surrounded by farmland, Digby says. SMM hosts  species, and a 6-foot-tall surrounds the sanctuarys nearly 30-mile circumference. But the predator-proof barrier wasnt built to contain Kkpthough flightless, they climb readily, using their beaks and talons to scale trees and fences. Outside the enclosure, the birds could easily fall prey to an invasive predator, so the Kkp Recovery group tested various fence modifications before the reintroduction to prevent the birds from climbing out. It took nearly 30 volunteers and sanctuary staff about 9 months to install thousands of smooth metal sheets to keep Kkp from scaling the fence. 

Perhaps we underestimated, for a lack of a better word, the athleticism of these birds.

Yet, somehow, theyve managed to escape. Its high stakes when a bird is outside the sanctuaryits an anxious time, says Dan Howie, one of the rangers tasked with monitoring Kkp daily. Perhaps we underestimated, for a lack of a better word, the athleticism of these birds.

Several of the parrots escaped in quick succession in October 2023, so the team kicked monitoring into high gear. The researchers try to stay as hands-off as possible, instead relying on tracking technology. NoraNetessentially a Fitbit for Kkpdetects birds if they pass within a certain distance of receivers. But it works best when birds are higher on the mountain, missing individuals when they descend into valleys. Each bird also wears a radio transmitter and GPS attached like a miniature backpack. Rangers ride ATVs or hike across the rugged terrain, carrying a large antenna that helps them triangulate each Kkp's location to within 300 feet a few times per weekthe more, the better. While the GPS doesnt currently allow for live tracking, data downloaded after the birds are recaptured, such as during their health checks, can reveal fine-scale movements and even potential escape routes.

Despite these tools, the curious Kkp continued to thwart reintroduction efforts. In November 2023, the Kkp Recovery group made the difficult decision to  birds back to the southern islands. And another three birds earned return flights in January 2024 after summiting the fence or suspiciously patrolling the perimeter. It is a stressful thing for the team, Ward says of escaped birds. Is it going to be alive? Is it going to be well? Besides Elwins eventful escape, four-year-old Tautahi walked a mile beyond the barrier before rangers found him. Manaaki, meanwhile, preferred to plop in a patch of blackberry bushes and gorge himself on the invasive plants tasty fruit.

Why and how the birds are escaping is unclear. The team suspects the birds climb nearby vegetation that leans close to the fence and use their outstretched wings to parachute softly to the ground. Occasionally they might have an opportunity to get up over the fence, and they arent necessarily trying to escape, theyre just trying to get to a different place, Digby says.

Though just four birds remain at SMM, everyone involved is committed to this trial to ensure Kkps long-term survival. After the the first bird broke out in 2023, a crew started clearing trees and low-hanging branches near the fence. But vegetation grows quickly, and almost 30 miles of fence mean the staff would have to work nonstop to keep vegetation at bay. Drones, which arrived in fall 2023, can help identify where to prioritize trimming and detect a missing bird faster. Soon, the team plans to set up mini-enclosures within the sanctuary to observe how Kkp interact with the fences. They also plan on updating NoraNet later this year to provide more coverage and will begin collecting GPS data more frequently.

Digby and the rest of the Kkp crew are still hopeful that the four remaining males at SMM will settle and eventually establish small territories. Though it could take years before the males start booming to attract females, the researchers are patient; releasing the birds to a safe spot on the mainland has been a goal since 2008. And if these four pioneers can stay put, down the road, the  Kkp Recovery group could release females to SMM with the ultimate goal of starting a breeding population.

To save the Kkp, the team knows they must be flexible and, sometimes, take chances. You kind of have to take risks when youve got an endangered species like this, Digby says. You want to be conservative, you want to preserve what youve got, but you also need to take some jumps to change things and improve things for the future.