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Petroica macrocephala
Miromiro
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 This
small forest bird has a large head with a small white spot above the bill and a
short tail. The male has a black head, glossy black upperparts and upper
breast and white underparts, divided at the breast, a white wingbar and sides to
the tail. The female has a brown head and upperparts, grey brown chin and
upper breast fading to white on the underparts. The wingbar and sides of
the tail are pale buff. The male call is a short high pitched ‘swee’
and he sings with a warbling ‘ti oly oly oly oly oh’. The female call
is a reedy ‘seet’.
Tomtit
eat mainly invertebrates (spiders, beetles, caterpillars, moths, weta,
earthworms, flies, stick insects and wasps) supplemented with small fruits in autumn and
winter. A ‘watch and wait’ method is used – perching and scanning an
area and then flying to catch the prey, usually on a nearby trunk or branch.
Insects are also gleaned from leaves and small branches.
Pairs
maintain their territory all year and stay together year after year.
Breeding is between September and January, during which up to 3 broods may be
raised. The female builds a bulky nest of twigs, bark, fibre and moss,
bound with cobwebs and lined with tree-fern scales, moss and fine grasses.
The nest is in either a tree cavity, the end of a broken branch, in a fork
attached to the trunk of a tree fern or in a thick tangle of vines.
(In January 2004, tomtit nests in the Hunua pine forests were found in
forked branches of gorse and at the top of decaying pampas grass.) The
clutch of 3 – 6 cream coloured eggs with yellowish purple spots is incubated
by the female for 15 – 17 days. The chicks fledge at 17 – 20 days, and
continue to be fed by both parents until the female starts renesting while the
male takes full care of them until they are independent at c. 35 days old.
To Maori the miromiro is
one of Maui’s birds and is a significant bird, being esteemed with the huia,
the royal albatross and white heron. An observant person is spoken of as
–“ he karu miromiro” - “having a tomtit eye” and the Maori called
tomtits “scouts” or “torotoro” due to their habit of appearing
from nowhere in the forest. He manu aroha te miromiro - “the miromiro is
the lovebird” and it had a place in Maori rituals for birth, tohunga, and a
new pa.
Occasionally
vagrant male Tomtit are seen on Tiri but they disappear after a few days.
The translocation of
miromiro (North Island tomtit) to Tiritiri Matangi took place at
the end of April 2004. The birds were sourced from
the Waytemore pine forests in the Hunuas, south east of Auckland city.
Photography by: Barbara
Hughes © (female, top left and bottom right), (male, top right)
References: Heather, B.D.; Robertson, H.A. 2000 The Field Guide to the Birds of New Zealand. Auckland, Viking.
Moon, G The Reed Field Guide to New Zealand Birds. www.nzbirds.com/Miromiro.html
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Conservation Status:
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Protected Endemic |
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Mainland Status:
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Widespread and locally common, esp in
Central N.I. beech forests |
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Size:
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13cm, 11g |
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Life Span:
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3 years |
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Breeding:
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September - January |
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Diet:
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Invertebrates, small fruits in autumn
and winter |
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First Introduced to Tiri:
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32 in 2004 |
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Population on Tiri:
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32 (April 2004) |
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Total Population:
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1,400 |
Description of Bird Bands on Tiritiri Matangi Island
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Left / Right
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Name
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Gender
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YG / YM
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Scratch |
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RM / YB |
Vic |
M |
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BG / YM |
Margaret |
F |
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YY / YM |
Elna |
F |
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YW / YM |
Mrs KP |
F |
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RM / RB |
Graham |
M |
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WR / YM |
Mrs Graham |
F |
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WB / YM |
Morag |
F |
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RW / YM |
Simon |
M |
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RR / YM |
Tim |
M |
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BY / YM |
Mrs Tim |
F |
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BB / YM |
Fraser |
M |
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WY / YM |
Joe |
M |
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WG / RM |
Mel |
M |
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GG /YM |
Mr Squabbles |
M |
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GY / YM |
Tane |
M |
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YR / YM |
Barbara |
F |
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YB / YM |
Ray |
M |
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WG / YM |
Butterbeck |
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WW / YM |
J |
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RG / YM |
Yoran |
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RB / YM |
Sonya |
F |
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BW / YM |
Laura |
F |
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BR / YM |
Rosalie |
F |
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GB / YM |
Scruff |
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GR / YM |
Smudge |
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GW / YM |
Rosemary |
F |
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RY / YM |
Mrs Loo |
F |
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RM / GB |
RG |
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WY / RM |
Hazel |
F |
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WR / RM |
Ian Price |
M |
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WB / RM |
Jack |
M |
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