I became quite friendly with one of the kakapo at the Milford Sound hostel. The staff were laughing that he was giving me the mating chit from the moment I walked into the yard and every time he saw me.
Are you sure it was a kākāpō? They are so rare, there aren't any on the mainland in New Zealand. (Unless they're in bird hospitals.) They are only found in offshore islands that you need permits to access. It was probably a kea. Still cute.
@@Purupuss22, I honestly can't say. I'm remembering it as a kakapo, but I'm a survivor of traumatic brain injury and my memories are arbitrary and unreliable at best.
Most informative video on kakapo ever! Really pleased you included the calls. I wish more people knew about these horny, vegan, avian subwoofers, they are the pandas of the birdworld.
@Spencer Elrond Spencer their downfall is just having adapted to a different situation than the rest of the world, and thus being poorly suited to competition with introduced animals.
i’ve recently came across your channel & i’ve loved listening to all sorts of your videos whilst i book bind! really passes the time & i learn so much 💖💖💖
Yay! I loved this video! I have only very recently become aware of this bird's existence and, sadly, high threat level of extinction. This video was one of the most informative summaries of the the bird's history. I especially enjoyed the sound clips of the different calls they make. I think I've found a new obsession in this seemingly so innocently naive, infinitely interesting, clever bird.. Thanks for taking the time to make this!
I'm glad you now know about them. Their population is definitely on the way up, it's just a matter of finding suitable habitation for them and ensuring the population is as diverse as possible.
@@HenrythePaleoGuy it gives me hope that they are increasing in population, poor little things.. They are extremely interesting little creatures and I hope they find a nice safe place to stabilize them. Thanks again for taking the time to compile all of the great information in this vid!
It’s a little out of date but Douglas Adams has a great book called “Last Chance to see” where he talks about his adventure to track some of the last kakapos in the wild to be moved to an island reserve off shore of N.Z. It’s a great read.
Ahhh I am a kiwi who really values the native ecosystem and I get really upset seeing what has happened to the country. The north island is pure farmland which looks awful and I really wish we had not only the beautiful trees and wild bush but the amazing birds too.
Thankfully, a few farms from what I've seen have done forest and shrub borders around their areas, and there have been reforestation projects done as well, although it most definitely needs to be done on a larger scale. In the future, I hope to create some reforestation projects as well, and bringing back animals that are for the moment locally extinct.
Yeah, it is almost everywhere in the world, more and more land is cleared for farming, especially for animal farming. Even though it is a really unnatural situation to have almost half of land area used by only one species (humans). The only hope is that human fertility rate will drop even more, and human population will stop rising, otherwise the process of replacing native habitats will never stop...
@@HenrythePaleoGuy There is a technology that has appeared in recent years, one that can end the invasive species issue on New Zealand, and every island. This technology is more a method, it inserts a gene into an animal, the gene is for sterility, but that animal is totally unaffected, it has to be in order for the gene to spread. But in the animal's next generation, the gene becomes slightly more active, slightly more prevalent, and as a result, some of the offspring are born infertile, and with each passing generation, more and more offspring are born infertile. Like a rolling snowball, the gene becomes so dominant that all descendants of that original creature are infertile, and as such the problem that animal poses becomes extinct with the creature. Of course, in order to totally eliminate the animal from the island, the gene would have to be inserted into hundreds upon hundreds of members of the same species of invasive animal, and then said members would have to be released all across the island so the gene spreads as wide as possible, in order to reduce the chance that a population of stoats or rats would be uninfected, and spread across the island to replace the now extinct infertile populations.
It strikes me that moving the kakapo to sanctuary islands was probably much easier because they weren't afraid of humans. It's ironic that one of the big factors in their endangerment has now become their salvation.
This story of this bird makes me truly sad about how atrocious our stewardship of this planet is. This is an amazing creature that has so much to teach us, representing a truly unique view at how evolution can diverge under isolated circumstances. Unfortunately, we just can’t have nice things without ruining them.
Love birds, Learn about birds is awesome, I just wish peoples stop kill birds. I have a question about new Zealand white island volcano i like to no about it.
These are one of my favorite birds. Im really not used to see bird skeletons. I saw your video of the NZ large eagle and I totally don't see their skeletons look in the manner of posture that they are in. Idk why it's so different than I imagine.
The levels of fluff, muscle and feathers really obscures their frame, so I absolutely agree that it's wild to see how they actually appear without all of it on them.
Kakapo is without a doubt my favorite animal, such a cool, weird and stupid bird! :D Evolution is against it but still it survives, as of past 30-40 years it's a shame it has gotten to where it is, but I think we can repopulate them eventually with the best in their field currently helping out and working with them! Lots of love to those people!
My one complaint about new Zealand bird of the week is that it can be kind of uneven between videos, with great amazing videos like this, and then some very short ones on others.
@@HenrythePaleoGuy This recently discovered bird now overshadows the Kakapo as the biggest parrot of all time. Hercules Inexpectatus, the giant stands about 2-3 feet tall, and while it is heavily debated to have been airborne, it is believed by some to have been an ancestor to the Kea, and it is also debated that like the Kea, this polly may have been carnivorous.
I searched giant parrot, first link Kakapo XD Then an article about a giant parrot I was like "it can't be that big", there was an image where it was as tall as a human leg... I was so surprised, I just said "what?" during thirty seconds XD
I was in another room when you played their booming and i looked out the window, thinking it was a foghorn or huge trucks horn. It would be nerve wracking to hear that in a forest without knowing what it is.
Wow! It definitely is a very interesting noise! I imagine the Maori would be quite confused and scared hearing all of them at night when they were still common.
wow, thats a lot of info. I never knew so much about kakapo. I hope they are able to make it in the future, but with those numbers, I guess it is not 100% certain.
If the Black robin could make it, then Kakapo have a great chance to bounce back. Thankful that at some point soon, new islands will be home to Kakapo once again.
So, kakapos are knowned to mate with everything including dead birds, clothes and human legs, but when giving a fake kakapo female to collect sperm, they don't mate? Feels like they don't want to be saved from extinction XD
This is a very silly animal. Must be great camping when those things are booming for 6-8 hours a night. Hormonal flightless parrot. Actually a good name for a band!
I truly can't understand that a tree-dweling bird, as a parrot is, can turn into a nocturnal, terrestrial herbivore. The pressures they would have suffered must be incredibly strong I mean, a ground-based bird as a rail or swamphen could easily lose its flight ability, as they barely use it in not flightless species, so with no mammalian predators it is an easy step. But in a parrot, that is a geat flyer and arboreal, is truly amazing.
From what I've gathered, Broad-brilled parrotss were weak fliers, but weren't entirely flightless. The recently discovered Heracles inexpectatus was however more than likely flightless given its size, and other extinct parrots yet to be discovered could've been flightless as well. But, in terms of extant and recently extinct parrots, Kakapo are the only flightless parrots.
@@HenrythePaleoGuy well of corse is the kakapo the only recent flightless parrot, I just wanted to to talk about this mysterious spieces, and from what I could gather were they practical flightless, not even be able for short flights, similar to many breeds of geese or turkeys, not being able for short bursts. But even though the kakapo was allways one of my favourite animals, I coudn't take its name serious, since its name litteraly translates in german as something like shitbutt ^^
Given how the kakapo evolved a herbivorous lifestyle, larger body size and flightlessness, could this mean that, if the kakapo were able to recover from the brink of extinction, could evolve into Moa-like bird types in the future?
Hey bro, amazing video. You taught me some seriously fascinating stuff about the Kakapo. I'm studying ecology and biodiversity at vic uni as i want to work with species like Kakapo. I'm currently reading a fantastic book about the Kea you should check out. It's called "Kea bird of Paradox " by Judy Diamond
45 million years of evolution, why do they have wings at all? Never mind their flight feathers are still air foils. It's incredible and interesting to me.
I didn't. Unfortunately, the video was already long, and given that it's the prime reason as to how they are known outside of New Zealand, I ultimately cut the segment.
It's interesting, as it was their distinctive odours and sounds that likely attracted dogs to them so easily in the first place... Then again, this is very close up, so if they were unfamiliar with the sound, they would definitely be confused.
This pack of nuts I've got get excited to any new sound they've not heard before. lol Interesting the sound is very similar to the sound of ruffled grouse drumming with their wings in the beginning of their rhythm. Bouncing off of the hills in the mountains it's difficult sometimes to zero in on where the sound is coming from.
The kakapo, the tuatara, the kiwi, the kea, the toroa, the korora : all extant yet, if barely for some. Animals that reproduce like the Kakapo are called K-strategists;) The kakapo as presented also shines as a capsule of New Zealand. An Archipelago that changed Eon upon Humans. Ecosystems best understood as what came out of a brutal rape making the victim slave to invaders upon invaders. Elsewhere on the planet humans have left deep imprints, but on New Zealand the arrival of humans is yet recent enough that the dust hasn't completely settled. What's mind-boggling is the dimension of the catastrophe for the venerable and marvelous ecological equilibrium in its own biodiversity, predating us on the Archipelago. The New Zealand ecosystems have by the humans-headed invasion been chopped to pieces too fast for surprise collapses revealing keystones by their losses, therefore the kakapo is (much like the others listed) honorably situated to count as keystone for the telling. Makes contemporary natives of New Zealand kind of wiser, to be growing in such a spectacle of nature, does it not?
Haast's eagles preyed upon Moa and other large birds, and once these animals declined, there were more pressured to find food, and when there prey became extinct, the Haast's eagles became extinct through starvation.
Amazing how som species can select the sex of their offspring using temperature or others can keep their eggs and a males sperm for prolonged period's. I'm still Amazed at people who see the ANIMAL KINGDOM below themselves but u Don't see Animals f.... king each other over for a Percentage 🤔 Fanx Ever So Much For Ur Hard Work Here, good vid, keep it up Hun 👍🏾😁😘💕🙏🏽🕊️🇬🇧
There is hope not only for the Kakapo, but the Kiwi, Kea, and every ecosystem scourged by invasive species. A method utilizing the CRISPR (I think it's done with CRISPR) has been devised, but is currently untested as far as my knowledge goes. Before divulging on the details of the method, I'll give you some information you may already know. One method that has been attempted is the capturing, neutering, and rereleasing of as many members of the invasive population as possible, but this isn't working because there will always be a single breeding pair that is uncaptured, and those breeders will replace the neutered ones, and the problem returns if the neutering ever stops, it can reduce the invasive populations but it cannot eradicate them. As far as I know this method has only been tried on the feral cats in New Zealand, but this method is more effective. It involves capturing, altering, and rereleasing the invasive animals into the ecosystem, just like the neuter/spay plan, but in order to be effective, several hundred, maybe even thousands of examples of the invasive species would have to be captured and rereleased in the entire infestation area in order for no population to escape this doom. The method involves using a CRISPR to insert a gene, one that's totally dormant, but gets stronger and stronger with each passing generation, the gene renders more and more of its holder's offspring infertile with each passing generation. And eventually, the population will go extinct, its last members dying without reproducing, and the invader is vanquished. I forgot what this method is called, and it has been proposed to eliminate Britain's mosquito population, but while expensive if used in as many members of the population then rereleased in a widespread area as possible, it can and most assuredly WILL be utilized in the manner I described. The rats, cats, Burmese Pythons, Cane Toads, Stoats, Snakeheads, and Killer Bees can all be a thing of the past in the areas they don't belong in.
Yes, I have heard of it. It really is remarkable, and is the best chance for ultimately ridding New Zealand these other regions of introduced pests. Just need the countries to open up to it, as the current conservation minister is a bit reluctant on using it as of now, but I see it as being a critical method that needs to implemented as soon as possible.
@@HenrythePaleoGuy But NZ's Conservation Minister is not wrong to be cautious, this particular application of the technology is untested. But yes, I do truly believe that's the answer.
@@HenrythePaleoGuy This would be excellent in eliminating the Cane Toads off of Australia, as well as their infamous rat infestation! Oh, and Killer Bees!
I am a kiwi. I love kakapo. I really wanna see one. Yesterday I saw a Kaka at the botanic garden and it was so cute. parrots are so clever.
They can be quite cuddly and affectionate as well
Cutest birb ever
Fact
The great land birblinq. Beautiful good bois
Tangmo mopet. Your A Virgin!
They are critically endangered and only 213 are left
Drawing WolfOwO [old account]
90% animals
1% humans
Yo thanks
The history of the kakapo is so depressing. Poor guys.
The history of life is depressing and wonderful in one baggage, but for the kakapo it might, uhh... find a way, as life dose.
25:08 "Kakapo are large enough to find off an attack, but lack the instincts to do so"
shows picture of Kakapo swarming a man
I became quite friendly with one of the kakapo at the Milford Sound hostel. The staff were laughing that he was giving me the mating chit from the moment I walked into the yard and every time he saw me.
Wendy Chavez I’d take that as a compliment lol.
Oh yes, I did!
Are you sure it was a kākāpō? They are so rare, there aren't any on the mainland in New Zealand. (Unless they're in bird hospitals.) They are only found in offshore islands that you need permits to access. It was probably a kea. Still cute.
@@Purupuss22, I honestly can't say. I'm remembering it as a kakapo, but I'm a survivor of traumatic brain injury and my memories are arbitrary and unreliable at best.
@@wendychavez5348 Whichever bird it was, I'm sure it was a magical experience!
GOEGEOUS ROUND CHONKY BOI
Most informative video on kakapo ever! Really pleased you included the calls.
I wish more people knew about these horny, vegan, avian subwoofers, they are the pandas of the birdworld.
Thank you for watching! Hopefully this video introduces more people to the world of the Kakapo.
Henry, loved the video, you should link with an NZ bird charity or start one, i love the weekly bird video.
I'm planning on doing something akin to that at some point in the future. :)
Sad to see another beautiful bird almost driven to extinction by cats and disease.
Don’t forget stoats,weasels,ferrets,possums
It is sad. Maybe we are collecting DNA for future generations.
@Spencer Elrond Spencer their downfall is just having adapted to a different situation than the rest of the world, and thus being poorly suited to competition with introduced animals.
@@Boyl151 rats too
@@Lara-234 barely though
i’ve recently came across your channel & i’ve loved listening to all sorts of your videos whilst i book bind! really passes the time & i learn so much 💖💖💖
Holy cow, the first time alive heard anyone use the proper term polygynous!! Cheers to you
These are the cutest dinosaurs I have ever seen
I myself am not from New Zealand, I'm from America, but I absolutely love your videos they are so informative.
Thank you! I'm glad you are learning some new things! :)
who would win?
a bird with a camoflauge perfected by millions of years of natural selection
OR
*one sniffy boi*
mammalian brain vs a dinosaur
They're so cute 😍... I wanna see one in person! Horrible to think how scarcely they escaped extinction.
Yay! I loved this video! I have only very recently become aware of this bird's existence and, sadly, high threat level of extinction. This video was one of the most informative summaries of the the bird's history. I especially enjoyed the sound clips of the different calls they make. I think I've found a new obsession in this seemingly so innocently naive, infinitely interesting, clever bird.. Thanks for taking the time to make this!
I'm glad you now know about them. Their population is definitely on the way up, it's just a matter of finding suitable habitation for them and ensuring the population is as diverse as possible.
@@HenrythePaleoGuy it gives me hope that they are increasing in population, poor little things.. They are extremely interesting little creatures and I hope they find a nice safe place to stabilize them. Thanks again for taking the time to compile all of the great information in this vid!
I love kakapo parrots so much 🥰❤️
Nothing like the Holiday season to hear from distant relatives. Squark! (Thanks)
It’s a little out of date but Douglas Adams has a great book called “Last Chance to see” where he talks about his adventure to track some of the last kakapos in the wild to be moved to an island reserve off shore of N.Z. It’s a great read.
Saving our native birds is paramount! Thanks for shedding light on our fight 💚
I now know a great deal more about these unique birds than I did. Grateful to you Henry, and well done :-)
Precious! Loved it! thanks for sharing!
Extraordinary loving bird.
From Montréal
Great work, both from you and the conservationists :)
Ahhh I am a kiwi who really values the native ecosystem and I get really upset seeing what has happened to the country. The north island is pure farmland which looks awful and I really wish we had not only the beautiful trees and wild bush but the amazing birds too.
Thankfully, a few farms from what I've seen have done forest and shrub borders around their areas, and there have been reforestation projects done as well, although it most definitely needs to be done on a larger scale. In the future, I hope to create some reforestation projects as well, and bringing back animals that are for the moment locally extinct.
@@HenrythePaleoGuy for sure. It's certainly not enough being done now
Not just farm, forestry aswell
Yeah, it is almost everywhere in the world, more and more land is cleared for farming, especially for animal farming. Even though it is a really unnatural situation to have almost half of land area used by only one species (humans). The only hope is that human fertility rate will drop even more, and human population will stop rising, otherwise the process of replacing native habitats will never stop...
@@HenrythePaleoGuy There is a technology that has appeared in recent years, one that can end the invasive species issue on New Zealand, and every island. This technology is more a method, it inserts a gene into an animal, the gene is for sterility, but that animal is totally unaffected, it has to be in order for the gene to spread. But in the animal's next generation, the gene becomes slightly more active, slightly more prevalent, and as a result, some of the offspring are born infertile, and with each passing generation, more and more offspring are born infertile. Like a rolling snowball, the gene becomes so dominant that all descendants of that original creature are infertile, and as such the problem that animal poses becomes extinct with the creature.
Of course, in order to totally eliminate the animal from the island, the gene would have to be inserted into hundreds upon hundreds of members of the same species of invasive animal, and then said members would have to be released all across the island so the gene spreads as wide as possible, in order to reduce the chance that a population of stoats or rats would be uninfected, and spread across the island to replace the now extinct infertile populations.
Probably the most iconic NZ bird.
Such a sweet looking bird.
Correction: Low frequency = long wavelength . The ability to travel long distances is correct.
Im stunned by the level of the video. Thanks.
I'm glad to hear! :)
A great example of convergent evolution. Its a tragedy that there as endangered as they are.
All this detailed information. Amazing 👏
Glad you liked it!
More on them to come!
I learned more about Aotearoa birds on this channel then at school.
The education system isn't the most specific, unfortunately.
So good we have the internet to assist in our knowledge. :)
It strikes me that moving the kakapo to sanctuary islands was probably much easier because they weren't afraid of humans. It's ironic that one of the big factors in their endangerment has now become their salvation.
It's more that they are afraid, but their defense mechanism is staying still and don't move :p
This bird looks like a combination of a parrot and a kiwi. What's not to like about this bird? 🥰
They are so lovely! Horribly incompetent at the whole surviving business, but so charming ;u;
Aww that was brilliant mate , what an amazing bird !
Many thanks. Glad you enjoyed it!
Fantastic piece of work.
The Kakapo species is on serious life support.
What a shame.
22:44 The Norway rat and brown rat are the same animal.
I love these long form videos!
This story of this bird makes me truly sad about how atrocious our stewardship of this planet is. This is an amazing creature that has so much to teach us, representing a truly unique view at how evolution can diverge under isolated circumstances. Unfortunately, we just can’t have nice things without ruining them.
Stewardship ? Mate, I would have thought you to be a Creationist if not for the fact tha you also acknowledged evolution in your comment.
Love birds, Learn about birds is awesome, I just wish peoples stop kill birds. I have a question about new Zealand white island volcano i like to no about it.
Chicken nugger gener-slides need to stop.
It’s mostly ferrets, stoats, weasels, possums that kill them
The Kakapo also came second in the New Zealand Bird of the Year, a popular vote run by NZ conservation organisation Forest & Bird.
These are one of my favorite birds. Im really not used to see bird skeletons. I saw your video of the NZ large eagle and I totally don't see their skeletons look in the manner of posture that they are in. Idk why it's so different than I imagine.
The levels of fluff, muscle and feathers really obscures their frame, so I absolutely agree that it's wild to see how they actually appear without all of it on them.
What a chubby cutie!😊💕So? Can he fly about as. Good as a chicken then..to roost at least?
Kakapo is without a doubt my favorite animal, such a cool, weird and stupid bird! :D
Evolution is against it but still it survives, as of past 30-40 years it's a shame it has gotten to where it is, but I think we can repopulate them eventually with the best in their field currently helping out and working with them!
Lots of love to those people!
Thanks a lot for providing this!
No problem!
Incredible video!
I recall a short video where a Kakapo had mounted a man and the other asked him to name the chick after him.
That's Sirocco, a Kakapo who was hand-reared when he was born, and therefore became imprinted on humans, hence is mounting behaviour. Lovely bird.
My one complaint about new Zealand bird of the week is that it can be kind of uneven between videos, with great amazing videos like this, and then some very short ones on others.
A gaint bird that's not a conder,but a giant parrot.
Please make also some episodes about currently extinct species, including recently discovered giant parrot
I will be at some point.
@@HenrythePaleoGuy This recently discovered bird now overshadows the Kakapo as the biggest parrot of all time. Hercules Inexpectatus, the giant stands about 2-3 feet tall, and while it is heavily debated to have been airborne, it is believed by some to have been an ancestor to the Kea, and it is also debated that like the Kea, this polly may have been carnivorous.
I searched giant parrot, first link Kakapo XD
Then an article about a giant parrot I was like "it can't be that big", there was an image where it was as tall as a human leg... I was so surprised, I just said "what?" during thirty seconds XD
I was in another room when you played their booming and i looked out the window, thinking it was a foghorn or huge trucks horn. It would be nerve wracking to hear that in a forest without knowing what it is.
Wow! It definitely is a very interesting noise! I imagine the Maori would be quite confused and scared hearing all of them at night when they were still common.
Such an amazing animal
wow, thats a lot of info. I never knew so much about kakapo. I hope they are able to make it in the future, but with those numbers, I guess it is not 100% certain.
If the Black robin could make it, then Kakapo have a great chance to bounce back. Thankful that at some point soon, new islands will be home to Kakapo once again.
kakapos are awesome!
So, kakapos are knowned to mate with everything including dead birds, clothes and human legs, but when giving a fake kakapo female to collect sperm, they don't mate?
Feels like they don't want to be saved from extinction XD
Dam they are stubborn
I didn’t know Kakapo were such interesting birds
This is a very silly animal. Must be great camping when those things are booming for 6-8 hours a night. Hormonal flightless parrot. Actually a good name for a band!
9:29 easy to imagine some antarctic ornithopods.
That one downvote comes from an industrial agriculture lobbyist, I bet.
Kākāpō, I call them fluffy avacados
This is my favorite bird I like it
this dude bites off the rubber part of my car. but I still love them. I'm crazy
Those are Kea, not Kakapo.
I truly can't understand that a tree-dweling bird, as a parrot is, can turn into a nocturnal, terrestrial herbivore. The pressures they would have suffered must be incredibly strong
I mean, a ground-based bird as a rail or swamphen could easily lose its flight ability, as they barely use it in not flightless species, so with no mammalian predators it is an easy step. But in a parrot, that is a geat flyer and arboreal, is truly amazing.
Kakapo still climb trees.
kakapo are so cute
Kakapo💙
KakaPO 💜
Does the inaccessible island rail count as a new Zealand birb?
Dudeeeee ok we talked about this for scholarship biology, I love this stuff... my name is also Henry.
Wonderful old school name. I've never met a Henry.
9:30 Whatchu gonna do when da birb oinks at you? 🤔🤔
A smal mistake, the kakapo wasn't the only known flying parrot. The extinct Broad-billed parrot native to mauritius also existed.
From what I've gathered, Broad-brilled parrotss were weak fliers, but weren't entirely flightless. The recently discovered Heracles inexpectatus was however more than likely flightless given its size, and other extinct parrots yet to be discovered could've been flightless as well. But, in terms of extant and recently extinct parrots, Kakapo are the only flightless parrots.
@@HenrythePaleoGuy well of corse is the kakapo the only recent flightless parrot, I just wanted to to talk about this mysterious spieces, and from what I could gather were they practical flightless, not even be able for short flights, similar to many breeds of geese or turkeys, not being able for short bursts. But even though the kakapo was allways one of my favourite animals, I coudn't take its name serious, since its name litteraly translates in german as something like shitbutt ^^
New Zealand Breath of the Wild!
Welcome back!
Given how the kakapo evolved a herbivorous lifestyle, larger body size and flightlessness, could this mean that, if the kakapo were able to recover from the brink of extinction, could evolve into Moa-like bird types in the future?
In millions of years in the future ^^'
And it would not be Moas, as they would probably keep wings for a long time ^^
So this parrot has the same ecological niche as the dodo as a flightless bird that distributes seeds?
Hey bro, amazing video. You taught me some seriously fascinating stuff about the Kakapo. I'm studying ecology and biodiversity at vic uni as i want to work with species like Kakapo. I'm currently reading a fantastic book about the Kea you should check out. It's called "Kea bird of Paradox " by Judy Diamond
Thank you for watching!
And I'll be sure to read that at some point.
An exquisite book!
45 million years of evolution, why do they have wings at all? Never mind their flight feathers are still air foils. It's incredible and interesting to me.
Helps with balance and reducing their fall
7:37 *ROUND*
I call them frogs of the parrot world because booming sound and swelling chest
i don't believe that you forget to mention that one time that a kakapo tried to mate with Stephen Fry's head
I didn't. Unfortunately, the video was already long, and given that it's the prime reason as to how they are known outside of New Zealand, I ultimately cut the segment.
The sound upsets my dogs too. lol
It's interesting, as it was their distinctive odours and sounds that likely attracted dogs to them so easily in the first place... Then again, this is very close up, so if they were unfamiliar with the sound, they would definitely be confused.
This pack of nuts I've got get excited to any new sound they've not heard before. lol
Interesting the sound is very similar to the sound of ruffled grouse drumming with their wings in the beginning of their rhythm. Bouncing off of the hills in the mountains it's difficult sometimes to zero in on where the sound is coming from.
cool!
Thanks!
The name kakapo translates to "poopoo butt" in German, which is funny and the reason I wrote this comment.
The kakapo, the tuatara, the kiwi, the kea, the toroa, the korora : all extant yet, if barely for some.
Animals that reproduce like the Kakapo are called K-strategists;) The kakapo as presented also shines as a capsule of New Zealand. An Archipelago that changed Eon upon Humans. Ecosystems best understood as what came out of a brutal rape making the victim slave to invaders upon invaders. Elsewhere on the planet humans have left deep imprints, but on New Zealand the arrival of humans is yet recent enough that the dust hasn't completely settled. What's mind-boggling is the dimension of the catastrophe for the venerable and marvelous ecological equilibrium in its own biodiversity, predating us on the Archipelago.
The New Zealand ecosystems have by the humans-headed invasion been chopped to pieces too fast for surprise collapses revealing keystones by their losses, therefore the kakapo is (much like the others listed) honorably situated to count as keystone for the telling. Makes contemporary natives of New Zealand kind of wiser, to be growing in such a spectacle of nature, does it not?
Mammals broke into the New Zealand Archipelago with a Vengeance: Humans, and cohorts of other species, like wasps.
Can they mimic speech?
Not that we know of.
2:00 not Haasts eagle another harrier that went extinct
The Haast's eagle and the Eyles' harrier both went extinct.
Anthony Appleyard Yep
Anthony Appleyard I am from that country and study birds of prey
This whole time I thought a Kakapo was a dog
Most innocent Bird ever
3:49 Kakapo Jump Scare
How on Earth did Hast Eagle go extinct but this cute, land dwelling bird survived ?
Haast's eagles preyed upon Moa and other large birds, and once these animals declined, there were more pressured to find food, and when there prey became extinct, the Haast's eagles became extinct through starvation.
@@HenrythePaleoGuy thanks a lot man ! And thank you for your work ! It is truly awesome !
Good luck and Godspeed.
No problem! I'm glad you enjoy the videos. :)
@@HenrythePaleoGuy the pleasure is all mine !
Shite Happens Plus Nice One! Cheers Xxx
Amazing how som species can select the sex of their offspring using temperature or others can keep their eggs and a males sperm for prolonged period's.
I'm still Amazed at people who see the ANIMAL KINGDOM below themselves but u Don't see Animals f.... king each other over for a Percentage 🤔
Fanx Ever So Much For Ur Hard Work Here, good vid, keep it up Hun 👍🏾😁😘💕🙏🏽🕊️🇬🇧
7:32 *THICC*
There is hope not only for the Kakapo, but the Kiwi, Kea, and every ecosystem scourged by invasive species.
A method utilizing the CRISPR (I think it's done with CRISPR) has been devised, but is currently untested as far as my knowledge goes. Before divulging on the details of the method, I'll give you some information you may already know.
One method that has been attempted is the capturing, neutering, and rereleasing of as many members of the invasive population as possible, but this isn't working because there will always be a single breeding pair that is uncaptured, and those breeders will replace the neutered ones, and the problem returns if the neutering ever stops, it can reduce the invasive populations but it cannot eradicate them. As far as I know this method has only been tried on the feral cats in New Zealand, but this method is more effective.
It involves capturing, altering, and rereleasing the invasive animals into the ecosystem, just like the neuter/spay plan, but in order to be effective, several hundred, maybe even thousands of examples of the invasive species would have to be captured and rereleased in the entire infestation area in order for no population to escape this doom. The method involves using a CRISPR to insert a gene, one that's totally dormant, but gets stronger and stronger with each passing generation, the gene renders more and more of its holder's offspring infertile with each passing generation. And eventually, the population will go extinct, its last members dying without reproducing, and the invader is vanquished. I forgot what this method is called, and it has been proposed to eliminate Britain's mosquito population, but while expensive if used in as many members of the population then rereleased in a widespread area as possible, it can and most assuredly WILL be utilized in the manner I described. The rats, cats, Burmese Pythons, Cane Toads, Stoats, Snakeheads, and Killer Bees can all be a thing of the past in the areas they don't belong in.
Yes, I have heard of it. It really is remarkable, and is the best chance for ultimately ridding New Zealand these other regions of introduced pests. Just need the countries to open up to it, as the current conservation minister is a bit reluctant on using it as of now, but I see it as being a critical method that needs to implemented as soon as possible.
@@HenrythePaleoGuy But NZ's Conservation Minister is not wrong to be cautious, this particular application of the technology is untested. But yes, I do truly believe that's the answer.
I agree completely agree, although I do wish that the technology is available for use as soon as possible after estensive testing is done.
@@HenrythePaleoGuy This would be excellent in eliminating the Cane Toads off of Australia, as well as their infamous rat infestation!
Oh, and Killer Bees!
Kaka paw is how it said
just another reason to dislike cats
❤❤❤
In german kakapo actually means doodybutt!
Very informative video, but so many of the photos are such poor quality. =\
@Git 'er done I watch on a regular desktop computer, but okay. Sorry someone hurt you.
Git 'er done you are a sad, strange little person.
I wish I could live where the mean annual temperature is 6°C
ich habe auch einen Kakapo