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Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae novaeseelandiae
Kereru
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The
kereru is the largest pigeon in New Zealand. The head, throat, upper
breast and upperparts are a metallic green with purplish sheen. The upper
breast is shaped like a babies bib and clearly stands out against the pristine
white of the lower breast and underparts. The bill is crimson with an
orange tip and both the eye and feet are crimson. The call is a soft
penetrating 'kuu'.
The kereru is herbivorous and although
they will eat foliage and flowers they love to eat fruit. The favoured
fruits are miro, pigeonwood, puriri, taraire, and tawa but also coprosma, elder,
hangehange, kahikatea, karaka, nikau, and titoki are eaten.
Breeding is between September and February
and is timed to coincide with certain fruits being available. The nest is
a flimsy affair, often a precariously balanced platform of sticks on a
horizontal fork. Often the egg or chick can be seen from the ground
through the nest. Both adults incubate for about 30 days and the young kereru
fledge at between 30 - 45 days old.
Photography by: Simon Fordham © (left) and Dr Kerry Rodgers ©
(right)
References: Heather, B.D.; Robertson, H.A. 2000 The Field
Guide to the Birds of New Zealand. Auckland, Viking.
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Conservation Status:
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Protected Threatened Endemic |
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Mainland Status:
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Widespread and locally common |
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Size:
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51cm, 650g |
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Life Span:
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10 years possibly |
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Breeding:
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September - February |
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Diet:
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Herbivorous - mainly fruit |
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