Kakapos are very unusual parrots. They're flightless, very large - sometimes reaching 4kg in weight - and their courtship system is one known as 'lekking', where the males gather together to display to the females. Kakapos are native to New Zealand, but now only exists on specially protected islands, where their nests are safe from introduced vermin such as rats, stoats and feral cats.
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Last Chance to See: Kakapo
In New Zealand Stephen and Mark look for the last kakapo, a fat, flightless parrot.
Wild Down Under: 12/09/2003
The seas around Australia contain exotic islands, from tropical New Guinea to icy New Zealand, each with its own stunning landscapes and unique wildlife.
South Pacific: Strange Islands
Why do animals perfectly adapted to island life give up the ghost when new species arrive?
James and the giant parrot
The kakapo may just look like an enormous budgie, but it smells like sweet meadows. James Mair travels to Codfish island to sniff one out
The Kakapo (Māori: kākāpō, meaning night parrot), Strigops habroptila (Gray, 1845), also called owl parrot, is a species of flightless nocturnal parrot endemic to New Zealand. It has finely blotched yellow-green plumage, a distinct facial disc of sensory, vibrissa-like feathers, a large grey beak, short legs, large feet, and wings and a tail of relatively short length. A certain combination of traits makes it unique among its kind—it is the world's only flightless parrot, the heaviest parrot, nocturnal, herbivorous, visibly sexually dimorphic in body size, has a low basal metabolic rate, no male parental care, and is the only parrot to have a polygynous lek breeding system. It is also possibly one of the world's longest-living birds. Its anatomy typifies the tendency of bird evolution on oceanic islands with few predators and abundant food: accretion of thermodynamic efficiency at the expense of flight abilities, reduced wing muscles, a diminished keel on the sternum, and a generally robust physique.
Kakapo are critically endangered; as of April 2009, only 125living individuals are known, most of which have been given names. The common ancestor of the Kakapo and the genus Nestor became isolated from the remaining parrot species when New Zealand broke off from Gondwana, around 82 million years ago. Around 70 million years ago, the kakapo diverged from the genus Nestor. In the absence of mammalian predators, it lost the ability to fly. Because of Polynesian and European colonisation and the introduction of predators such as cats, rats, and stoats, most of the Kakapo were wiped out. Conservation efforts began in the 1890s, but they were not very successful until the implementation of the Kakapo Recovery Plan in the 1980s. As of January 2009, surviving Kakapo are kept on two predator-free islands, Codfish (Whenua Hou) and Anchor islands, where they are closely monitored. Two large Fiordland islands, Resolution and Secretary, have been the subject of large-scale ecological restoration activities to prepare self-sustaining ecosystems with suitable habitat for the Kakapo.
The conservation of the Kakapo has made the species well known. Many books and documentaries detailing the plight of the Kakapo have been produced in recent years, one of the earliest being Two in the Bush, made by Gerald Durrell for the BBC in 1962. Two of the most significant documentaries, both made by NHNZ, are Kakapo - Night Parrot (1982) and To Save the Kakapo (1997). The BBC's Natural History Unit also featured the Kakapo, including a sequence with Sir David Attenborough in The Life of Birds. It was also one of the endangered animals that Douglas Adams and Mark Carwardine set out to find for the radio series and book Last Chance to See. An updated version of the series has been produced for BBC TV, in which Stephen Fry and Carwardine revisit the animals featured to see how they're getting on almost 20 years later, and in January 2009, they spent time filming on Codfish Island to see the Kakapo.
The Kakapo, like many other New Zealand bird species, has historically been important to the Māori, the indigenous people of New Zealand, appearing in many of their traditional legends and folklore. They were also hunted and utilised as a resource both for their meat and for their feathers which were used for making clothing.
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Order: Parrot (Psittaciformes)
Family: New Zealand parrot (Nestoridae)
Genus: Strigops
Species: Kakapo (habroptila)
Owl parrot
Adaptation data provided by Animal Diversity Web
This region contains the following habitats:
Species range provided by WWF's Wildfinder
© MMIX
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