
Soon, the Kkp of New Zealand will have a little extra motivation when its time to mate. Thats because, thanks to a recent , some of these large, flightless, long-lived parrots will be treated to a special saxophone-laden soundtrack. The composer behind the mood music will be of a recent search to find the next Kenny G. of Kkp smooth jazz.
Of course, theres no evidence that critically endangered Kkp, which breed in leks every two to three years, find saxophone music particularly romantic. For the Kkp Recovery team and its partner in the project Meridian Energy, the campaign was more about raising awareness than coming up with a serious conservation strategy. But the search points to a larger truth about the Kakapo conservation effort: Its as good at getting the word out about the 鬼櫻域櫻梯&紳莉莽梯;as it is at working to save them.
Kkp, the heaviest parrots in the world, need all the help they can get. The birds without natural mammalian predators, making them easy targets for the cats, rats, and stoats that arrived with European settlers hundreds of years ago. 鬼櫻域櫻梯&紳莉莽梯;were nearly wiped out by these invaders, but in the mid-1990s, when the population hovered around 51 birds, New Zealands was formed to help bring these birds back from the brink.
The birds' first big social media break came in 2009, when the internet met Sirocco, a 21-year-old 鬼櫻域櫻梯&紳莉莽梯; for, in the words of the BBC television hosts, shagging zoologist Mark Carwardine while filming a documentary on the species (remember his name). The video of against Carwardine's head launched the bird's career: In 2010, New Zealand Prime Minister John Key appointed Sirocco the countrys first Spokesbird for Conservation.
If only all captures were this easy! Kkp team technical advisor about to catch Bonus, fast asleep on a branch. Bonus often gives us the run-around in the winter; in booming season the males seem understandably dead-tired during the day.
Dr Andrew Digby (@takapodigs)
Since then, Siroccos fame has only grown. Hes around the country to educate the public about Kkp, even making it to New Zealands parliament. His has over 220,000 followers and, along with his , is a wholesome little corner of bird joy on the internet. Part of the charm in following Sirocco can be attributed to 鬼櫻域櫻梯&紳莉莽梯;themselves: Theyre fat, fluffy, slow, and have an adorable weirdo persona thats .
Andrew Digby, a scientific advisor for , also tweets about Kkp conservation efforts on his . Digby, who has been with the program for five years, says the focus on public communication is critical for saving the Kkp. The recovery program relies heavily on donations and symbolic adoptions for funding, which have both gone up over the last few years. Its also important for garnering knowledge from breeding experts outside the team, and for introducing new audiences to the birds and the importance of conservation.
They look a little bit like grumpy old men," Digby says. When you see this big bird lumbering across the forest floor, it looks like no other bird you know.
can mate for an hour. The smart transmitters males wear detect this movement, and switch on a receiver to detect the female ID. The details are stored, picked up by nearby data loggers, and transmitted via data network to the internet. No privacy!
Dr Andrew Digby (@takapodigs)
For those following along, the social feeds of Digby and Sirocco provide a highly entertaining yet educational peek into the Kkp world. Both accounts, which are run by the Department of Conservation, have highlighted the sometimes futile efforts of the 鬼櫻域櫻梯&紳莉莽梯;Recovery team to successfully breed the birds. Sirocco, in particular, is notoriously bad at breedinginstead of trying to mate with other Kkp, he . The Kkp Recovery team, hoping to collect some of Siroccos semen to inseminate female Kkp, created a specifically designed for semen collectionbasically turning Siroccos viral antics into an actual conservation strategy.
It didnt work. Nor did , a remote-controlled female 鬼櫻域櫻梯&紳莉莽梯;meant to entice other males and gather their semen. But both experiments made for some amazing tweets and highlighted just how tricky getting these rare birds to breed successfully can be.
Luckily, there are plenty of moments to be celebrated in the 鬼櫻域櫻梯&紳莉莽梯;media world, too, including the ugly-cute chicks that have just begun to hatch and videos of male 鬼櫻域櫻梯&紳莉莽梯;performing their mating displays. Siroccos accounts are relentlessly fun and upbeat; even when for two years after his radio transmitter went dark, he kept up his usual antics on social media. The Kkp also have their own now, run by New Zealand science broadcaster Alison Ballance, which allows die-hard fans to keep up with all things Kkp.
I find theres a really diverse audience, social media-wise and just in general, for Kkp," Digby says. Its good because its sometimes not people who would otherwise connect with conservation, and people see this crazy weird bird and think, woah, thats really weird, thats really funny, and then learn a little about it.
Skraaarrk! I love cutting edge science, but I heard was trending on Twitter and I couldnt help myself佞
Sirocco Kkp (@Spokesbird)
Kkp Recovery efforts are particularly difficult because Kkp breed only when rimu trees, whose berries are high in Vitamin D and other nutrients important for egg-laying and chick-raising, yield lots of fruit. That doesnt happen every year, so when there isn't a crop, 鬼櫻域櫻梯&紳莉莽梯;dont breed at all. During breeding years, Kkp Recovery team experts go to great lengths to ensure as many chicks as possible survive. Since they are vulnerable to mammalian predators, all 147 鬼櫻域櫻梯&紳莉莽梯;live on three predator-free islands off the coast of New Zealand: Codfish, Anchor, and Little Barrier Island. Team members monitor the birds, provide regular health checks and supplemental food, use artificial insemination to raise each females chances of hatching a viable chick, and sometimes incubate and hand-rear chicks themselves.
In big breeding years, all that effort pays off. And this year is expected to be a really succesful one for 鬼櫻域櫻梯&紳莉莽梯;chicks: Two have hatched already, and about 50 fertile eggs are still being incubated. The Kkp bred earlier than usual this year, so Digby and the team are already encouraging females to breed again. Hes hoping for 50 chicks if all goes well, though there are likely to be in the chicks early weeks and months.
The growth in population means that Kkp Recovery experts will eventually have to introduce the birds to new islands as they run out of room. One of the main islands theyre looking at is Resolution Island, in southwest New Zealand. Resolution, however, is home to stoats, one of the species that, along with rats and cats, the defenseless 鬼櫻域櫻梯&紳莉莽梯;centuries ago.
In a way, thats a bit of a scary step for us, but in a way its an important step, Digby says. If we can get 鬼櫻域櫻梯&紳莉莽梯;and stoats in low densities co-existing, then that would open up more places that we could put them.
As the team eyes a possible expansion, keeping up public support for its conservation efforts will remain vital. But while he knows how charismatic 鬼櫻域櫻梯&紳莉莽梯;are and is happy that theyve developed a healthy following, Digby realizes the importance of showing the losses along with the wins, cautioning that every conservation effort has its setbacks and tragedies. Chicks don't survive, eggs are crushed, mistakes are made.
Obviously we want people to engage in conservationwe dont want them to switch off, he says. On the other hand, I dont want it to be too fluffy and frilly . . . I like to talk about when birds die, as well as when chicks are hatched, because its really important that people dont just think that everything is bright and rosy.
Despite these important doses of reality, for the followers of Digby, Sirocco, and all the other Kkp that appear in their social feeds, the joy outweighs the sorrow more often than not. And both are just part of the grand effort to save one of the internet's favorite birds.