Top storiesNew ZealandPoliticsBusinessEntertainmentSportsWorld

Endangered kea at Queenstown's Remarkables skifield on the rise

Thursday, 19 September 2019

It took three days and a backpack to rescue the kea, stuck in a crevasse on Fox Glacier.

The number of kea at the Remarkables ski field in Queenstown has almost doubled in the past year, with seven known to revisit the area.

It follows a two-year predator control and habitat management by skifield staff and the Kea Conservation Trust.

The return of the endangered birds was a 'remarkable feat' NZSki chief executive Paul Anderson said.

Thousands of kea lived in South Island mountains but numbers have decreased in recent years.
Thousands of kea lived in South Island mountains but numbers have decreased in recent years.

'We're passionate about deepening our understanding of this rare and cheeky bird.'

**READ MORE:

The number of kea visiting The Remarkables ski area has almost doubled in the last year to seven.
The number of kea visiting The Remarkables ski area has almost doubled in the last year to seven.

Naughty kea settle into a farm south of Nelson 

Kea heroically rescued from West Coast crevasse

Kea may be smarter than we thought: Researchers uncover evidence of tool use in the wild

Death of kea will remain a mystery after family disposes of birds' bodies

Winter Games NZ: Jennie Symons relives 'gnarly' tumble at The Remarkables

Knights tussle over proposed Remarkables skifield chairlift**

Last year he announced NZSki would give $250,000 over five years toward finding and protecting the nationally endangered bird at The Remarkables and Coronet Peak skifields, in Queenstown, and Mt Hutt, in Canterbury.

Thousands of the native parrots lived in the South Island mountains but numbers had reduced dramatically in recent years with only four known kea at The Remarkables and none spotted at Mt Hutt last year.

Part of the programme was to catch the kea, test for lead poisoning (and rehabilitate as needed), tag the birds and, if possible, attach a $350 transmitter to any adult females, so they can track movements and find the nesting site.

Anderson said five of the seven known kea had so far been banded and were being monitored.

Last weekend one of the male kea was officially named Tāhae, which means 'thief' in Te Reo Māori, by Alexandra woman Amy McLoughlin. 

Ski staff would name the other tagged birds.

The Kea Conservation Trust is now planning to extend its monitoring efforts across the Wakatipu basin, at Ben Lomond, the only other site in the Wakatipu known to have kea visiting.

Trust co-founder and chair Tamsin Orr-Walker said people who saw kea were encouraged to report their sightings via the kea sightings database.

NZSki staff would continue their extensive summer Kaitiakitanga programme across The Remarkables, Coronet Peak and Mt Hutt through native plant revegetation, pest control and wilding pine eradication – ensuring the mountain environments are a place where native birds like the kea can thrive.