The total number of kakapo (M. night parrot) recorded since the mid-1900s is around two hundred. With only around 140 alive at present, those surviving need all the help they can get to ensure the species continued existence. The remaining birds exist in a variety of locations including Anchor, Codfish, Maud, Little Barrier and Pearl Islands with no known birds on the mainland. In 1989 there were just 40 of these cute and curious flightless parrots left in the population, a population teetering on the brink of collapse. Extensive recovery efforts have bolstered the population to the 140-odd birds we have today.
Most New Zealanders are familiar with Sirocco, the 'ambassador' kakapo, a chick hand-raised after a respiratory disease meant he had to be removed from the nest who subsequently failed to be reintegrated to the kakapo society as he identified more strongly with people! Sirocco fits into the wedge of the population known among the rangers as 'studs and duds'. Bird who are not suitable for breeding due to either genetic over-representation or due to poor reproductive attributes.
The Department of Conservation (DOC) have created the Kakapo Recovery Programme which has been running for the past few decades, a more formal advancement of the volunteer work done by the likes of Don Merten from the early 70s onwards.
This entry is a record of my time spent as a volunteer ('volly') on one of the remote pest and predator free islands in Dusky Sound, Anchor Island, as part of this programme.