Ducktales Episode 4: Whio – the ten-buck-duck | Conservation blog

Source: Department of Conservation

Perhaps you know your Daffy from your Donald, your Huey from your Louie and Dewey, but do you really know your ducks?

Communications and Media Advisor Krysia Nowak takes a duck-dive into the shallows for a quick wade around the ducks of Aotearoa.


This is the final episode, friends, with a focus on the fantastically fabulous whio. Found only in Aotearoa New Zealand (unless you happen to take a $10 note overseas), whio are more threatened than some species of kiwi – it’s time we showed them some love!

Adult whio | William Harland CC BY-ND 4.0

What’s in a name?

As Shakespeare almost once said, ‘a blue duck by any other name would still be blue’. Except these aren’t, really. At a stretch they might be a steel blue, but my personal opinion is that the name came about because ‘grey duck’ was already taken (See Ducktales Episode 1: Quacking the case on mallards and grey ducks). A more accurate name, then, is the te reo Māori ‘whio’, or ‘kowhiowhio’, said to resemble the whistling sound the males make.

Whistling you say? That’s right, no generic quacking for our whio whānau. Males have a piercing whistle, synonymous with out backcountry river soundscape, while the females utter a purring sort of growl.

Make of that what you will.

Listen here: https://www.doc.govt.nz/globalassets/documents/conservation/native-animals/birds/bird-song/blue-duck.mp3

A whitewater wonder

You may be used to ducks living on still water, perhaps gently flowing water, a pond, a stream, a lowland river. Not so the whio; they’re thrill-seekers. Instead, picture these hardy ducks on rapids we’d usually associate with rafting and adventure sports. Even the ducklings can handle strong currents with ease, thanks to their oversized ‘umbrella-like’ feet.

Umbrella feet

Whio are only distantly related to our other ducks, as they separated from other species a long time ago. They’ve specialised in this fast-flowing environment, in fact, they’re one of only four species of duck in the world adapted to live in ‘torrent’ environments!

To give an example of their specialisation, I once saw a whio family on the pond at Tongariro National Trout Centre (they pop in occasionally, a holiday from the river I guess). I had the privilege of watching one of the adult whio chasing a mallard around the pond. Swimming near each other the differences were stark – whio with their streamlined bodies racing through the water, next to the dingy-like mallard at a relaxed pace. Needless to say, the mallard ceded the pond, and the whio emerged victorious.

Clean, clear, and cold

Whio need clean, clear, cold water to survive. Well…mostly so they can eat. Visual hunters, they peruse the current and under rocks for tasty insects and worms (with a cool beak!). They can handle the occasional flood muddying the water, but permanently silty environments kill their kai, and their ability to find it.

A whio surveying its domain | Michael Hayward CC BY-ND 4.0

So why clean and cold? Well not a whole lot of things like to live in pollution (except humans, apparently), and whio food is no exception. Prime whio fodder like mayflies, caddis, and stoneflies have high oxygen needs. Pollution uses up oxygen, and warm water holds less oxygen, so clean and cold is where it’s at.

Stoatally uncool

Imagine whio back before mammalian predators were introduced, when threats came from other birds like harriers and black-backed gulls. Birds are visual, and most (with a couple of notable exceptions) don’t have a good sense of smell. So, the ultimate whio defence strategy was born: look like a rock. People unfamiliar with whio spotting often fail to spot the ‘slightly animated rocks’ that betray a stealthy whio. Ducklings are a black and white combination that somehow disappears completely in the rapids.

Try and count whio ducklings on the move. Go on, I dare you.

Black and white whio ducklings are hard to track in the rapids | Bradley Shields CC BY-ND 4.0

Enter mammalian predators, like stoats, with an excellent sense of smell to tell boulder from bird. Suddenly, whio are *ahem* sitting ducks.  Whio aren’t completely defenceless; they’re feisty and can often fight off predators, but they have no way to hide from predators who can sniff them out, and it’s difficult to fight a stoat and keep your eggs alive at the same time. If a stoat finds a female whio sitting on her nest, it’s only a matter of time before it either kills her or drives her off and eats the eggs. All the while, the male whio is diligently watching the river and sky for threats, not realising the real threat now comes from the land (this breaks my heart).

By the time conservationists realised there was a problem, there were estimated to be less than 2500 whio left in the entire country.

Whio Forever?

So, how can we stop the decline of whio? Partner up!

If we control stoats in whio habitat, we give whio their best chance of resilience in the face of other threats like climate change. We’re pretty fortunate here at DOC to have a partnership with Genesis, and with their support we’ve been able to protect more than 1,500 kilometres of river in whio habitat in locations across New Zealand.

Stoats aren’t the only threat to whio though, many of our rivers aren’t as healthy as they used to be, so habitat loss is right up there, along with climate change. Helping to keep our rivers healthy (don’t litter, plant trees, wash your car on the grass, etc), and reducing our greenhouse gas emissions (you know the drill) are actions that can help the wider picture for fabulous whio.

Whio live year-round on fast flowing rivers and streams | DOC

Well, I’m all out of ducks, and you’ve made it to the end of the ducktales blogs; well done you! Now you get to go on and share all these new facts at your Christmas parties. You’re welcome; you can thank me by being decent to ducks:

Be decent to ducks

Be a responsible cat owner, by:

  • Desexing and microchipping your cat
  • Keeping your cat indoors or contained inside a ‘catio’, especially at night
  • Putting your cat in a cattery when you go on holiday
  • Never taking them onto public conservation land.

Be a responsible dog owner:

  • This link is about dogs on beaches, but it has good advice for many natural environments: Dogs on beaches (doc.govt.nz)
  • For whio it’s also important to keep dogs on a lead around rivers during nesting season (August to January)
  • Hunters can request whio avoidance training alongside kiwi avoidance training for their dogs – visit https://www.kiwiavoidancetraining.nz/

Please don’t feed ducks, feeding wild birds can:

  • Make them sick or make them starve because they are eating the wrong things
  • Make them gather in unusually high numbers, spreading disease (we’re especially wary of this with H5N1 avian influenza spreading overseas)
  • Increase their numbers at a cost to other species (e.g. mallards outcompeting pāteke on Aotea/Great Barrier Island)
  • Modify natural behaviours so the birds spend more time in locations where they are at risk of pet attacks or car strike
  • Increase risks to human health by increasing the concentration of bird faecal matter

Trap introduced predators at home or in your community:

Ducktales Episode 2: The Teal Deal | Conservation blog

Source: Department of Conservation

Perhaps you know your Daffy from your Donald, your Huey from your Louie and Dewey, but do you really know your ducks?

Communications and Media Advisor Krysia Nowak takes a duck-dive into the shallows for a quick wade around the ducks of Aotearoa. Missed the first episode? Catch up here – Ducktales episode 1: Quacking the case on mallards and grey ducks.


Before we get started, let me address the truly confusing fact that teal is both a colour and a bird. It seems the bird came first, and the colour is based on that Eurasian bird. My question is: if we continue our groundbreaking naming of teals in New Zealand (brown teal, grey teal), what happens if we find a teal-coloured teal? Moving on…

Pāteke/Brown teal

Honestly, ornithologists (bird-nerds) are pretty uncreative with their names. Brown teal indeed. Pāteke are ADORABLE. I think it’s the wee white ring around their eye. Oh, and may I introduce the ducklings?

A pāteke family at Auckland Zoo. Image credit: Aja Pendergrast/Auckland Zoo.

Like the mallards in Episode 1, these are dabblers (it’s a popular pastime); pāteke have seriously low numbers but are listed as at risk-recovering, thanks to some excellent conservation efforts. In places where they don’t have specific conservation efforts, they’re still vulnerable to habitat loss and predation.

Up close they are unmistakeable, but from a distance pāteke may appear similar to other ducks. Look out for a duck smaller than a mallard flying low and fast over water, most commonly around the northern half of the North Island.

See a brown looking teal with a white eye-ring on mainland New Zealand? It’s probably a pāteke. Image credit: Paul Jansen/DOC.

The case of pāteke v mallard on Aotea Great Barrier Island

In a troubling turn of events, the pāteke population on Aotea is under threat from the insurgent mallard population. Prosecutors claim introduced mallards are outbreeding the endemic pāteke, with the injury centred on humans artificially increasing mallard success by feeding them. The judge has not ordered any recompense, but humans are reminded to avoid feeding any wild bird and continue to be ‘decent to ducks’ (more below).

Tētē/grey teal

Aussie cousins of our teals, grey teal are now considered native and aren’t threatened. Grey teal are nomadic dabblers with one stand-out feature – brilliant red eyes. Despite their alarming gaze, experts assure me they are not vampires, but feed on insects, molluscs and seeds. I’m still not inviting one in at nighttime.

Easily confused with the occasional visitor the chestnut teal.

With eyes like that, surely grey ducks are up to no good? Image credit: Paul Jansen/DOC.

WAY down South

Two endemic teals live on our subantarctic islands, and both are flightless so don’t expect to be seeing them in your backyard anytime soon (or anywhere else in the world). Auckland Island and Campbell Island teals are each similar in appearance to their mainland cousin the pāteke. Your best bet for identification is location – see a brown-looking teal? Check what island you are on, and you probably have your answer! Campbell Island teal are among the world’s rarest ducks, fortunately now increasing thanks to rat eradication on their home ground.

See you soon for the final episode of Ducktales!


Be decent to ducks

Be a responsible cat owner, by:

    • Desexing and microchipping your cat
    • Keeping your cat indoors or contained inside a ‘catio’, especially at night
    • Putting your cat in a cattery when you go on holiday
    • Never taking them onto public conservation land.

    Be a responsible dog owner

    Please don’t feed ducks, feeding wild birds can:

    • Make them sick or make them starve because they are eating the wrong things
    • Make them gather in higher than usual numbers, spreading disease (we’re especially wary of this with H5N1 avian influenza spreading overseas)
    • Increase their numbers at a cost to other species (e.g. mallards outcompeting pāteke on Aotea/Great Barrier Island)
    • Increase risks to human health by increasing the concentration of bird faecal matter

    Trap introduced predators at home or in your community

    Ducktales Episode 1: Quacking the case on mallards and grey ducks | Conservation blog

    Source: Department of Conservation

    Perhaps you know your Daffy from your Donald, your Huey from your Louie and Dewey, but do you really know your ducks?

    Communications and Media Advisor Krysia Nowak takes a duck-dive into the shallows for a quick wade around the ducks of Aotearoa.


    Mallard-y

    I’m starting with the obvious. Undoubtably, the most common and most basic (*cough*) of all our ducks is the mallard.

    An introduced dabbling duck (more on this in a moment), mallards are everywhere, all up in your face, and nibbling your toes. Acclimatisation societies begun by European colonists introduced, bred, and released mallards extensively from the 1870s to the 1970s – by which time mallards had become the most common waterfowl in the country.

    Female mallards are brown speckled specimens, and the males – like many in the bird world – have more glamorous feathered appearances.


    What’s a dabbler?

    Apparently, a dabbler is someone who takes a slight interest in a topic for a short period, but I won’t judge you for your hobby-hopping.

    For ducks, being a dabbler is feeding by poking around with the bill in shallow water, accompanied by some scandalous upending behaviour displaying their rump for all to see (potentially causing quite a flap in some circles!).


    Grey ducks/pārera

    Despite their dreary name, these dabblers are adorable with their eye stripes and speckled bodies – and they’re almost indistinguishable from female mallards. Native to Australia, New Zealand, and the Pacific Islands, these nationally critical cuties are possibly among our most endangered ducks, and in some ways our most difficult to protect. They face the normal threats (habitat loss, predators), but a far more insidious threat faces pārera: hybridization.

    Hybridization occurs when animals of different species reproduce together; their offspring may show different features from the different parents, they may be sterile, or as in the case of pārera x mallard, able to reproduce further.

    Mallards (see above) have a dastardly habit of hybridizing with our endemic pārera, meaning the New Zealand population of grey duck may be forever lost to the overwhelming genetics of the introduced mallard.

    We might be watching one of our species disappearing in front of our eyes – and we have no way to stop it; but maybe it’s just nature doing its thing.

    How to tell pārera and mallards apart? Alas, it’s almost impossible if you aren’t an expert. There’s a whole key to help photographers accurately identify their sightings. Hybrids of mallard and pārera combine the features of each in a multitude of ways. This inconsistency is their downfall; we actually aren’t even sure if there are any pure pārera left in Aotearoa New Zealand.

    Pārera are native to other places, so they aren’t going to disappear completely from the world. The best thing we can do for pārera in Aotearoa is to look after our freshwater and be decent to ducks – check out the tips below.


    Being decent to ducks

    • Be a responsible cat owner, by:
      • Keeping your cat indoors or contained inside a ‘catio’, especially at night
      • Putting your cat in a cattery when you go on holiday
      • Never taking them onto public conservation land.
    • Be a responsible dog owner
    • Please don’t feed ducks, feeding wild birds can:
      • Make them sick or make them starve because they are eating the wrong things
      • Make them gather in high numbers, spreading disease (we’re especially wary of this with H5N1 avian influenza spreading overseas)
      • Increase risks to human health by increasing the concentration of bird faecal matter
    • Trap introduced predators at home or in your community

    Make sure to keep an eye out for Ducktales: Episode 2 and 3, still to come!