Kea
| Kea | ||||||||||||||
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| Nestor notabilis |
Both female and male Kea are alike in their green coloration. Both have red plumage on the napes of their necks and underneath the wings that can be easily seen while in flight. The only true visible distinction between the genders is their mandible with the male having a larger longer curving upper mandible. The juvenile Keas have bright orange-yellow feathers around their mandible and nostrils, juveniles typically acquire their adult plumage at approximately eighteen months of age. Keas are predominantly ground avian, and are very playful in character often amusing onlookers with their acrobatics and sideways hopping antics even to move forwards. They prefer the ground to arboreal habitats. Keas typically nest in crevices under rocks, in the roots of trees or hollow logs. Keas can typically be found in flocks of ten or more, and during breeding, juveniles can be found in groups topping the hundreds. Breeding seasons typically occur between July and January. Keas lay clutches of 2-4 eggs per season and these are incubated by the female for around twenty-nine days. When the chicks are a month old the male Kea assists in their feeding. Keas are reported to have polygamist breeding behaviors with the male pairing up with up to 4 females.
Their diet consists of leaves, buds, fruits, insects, carrion and the remains of dead animals. Keas need to obtain fats to survive the harsh alpine environment and have been known to visit local rookeries and rob the nests of their eggs or young chicks. They have also reportedly been seen driving sheep over cliffs to plummet to their deaths to obtain their kidney fats.
The Kea is now a protected species, but was once hunted for a bounty paid by farmers for killing their sheep. At one time ten shillings were being offered per Kea beak, today that would be the equivalent of sixty-five dollars. Reports have documented an estimated 150,000 Keas to have been slaughtered during this period. In the 1970s the Kea received partial protection after census counted 5000 Keas. They were not fully protected until 1986, when farmers were persuaded to give up their legal right to shoot any Kea that tampered with property or livestock, in exchange the government agreed to investigate any reports of such problem birds and have them safely removed from the land. Despite sufferings incurred by the hands of humans the Kea remains a very friendly, playful human-loving bird
