Tūturuatu Telegraph: How a poster can set your life on a course | Conservation blog

Source: Department of Conservation

By Jana Beer

The tūturuatu / tchūriwat’ / shore plover is a bird in need of urgent PR. With just 250 individuals left in the wild on a handful of predator-free islands, it is one of the world’s rarest shore birds, facing issues related to real estate, genetics and a pandemic.

Through collaboration and cooperation with tangata whenua, tchakat henu, community groups, and other stakeholders, the DOC-led Shore Plover Recovery Programme aims to turn the tide on this bird’s fate. This ‘Tūturuatu Telegraph’ we talk to Rose Collen about her time as the Shore Plover Captive Management Coordinator as she hands over the reins.

Rose Collen in her ‘happy place’, overlooking The Clears on South East (Rangatira) / Hokorereoro Island

One of our earliest forms of self-expression are the posters we put on our walls. Sure, that puppy-in-soft-focus might be ripped down in teenage angst, replaced with your favourite music idol / movie / heart throb (Luke Skywalker, guilty as charged). But you can’t underestimate the impact of those early posters and their subliminal messages as you drift off to sleep. For a young Rose Collen, that poster, titled ‘Children of Tāne’, depicted forest birds of Aotearoa New Zealand, leading to a fascination with birds on the brink of extinction and the predator-free islands they were protected on.

It is no surprise then, that after leaving Uni, she was drawn towards volunteer work on predator-free islands to support endangered forest birds. This adventure saw her island-hop from Hauraki Gulf islands Tiritiri Matangi and Te Hauturu-o-Toi / Little Barrier, to Mana Island, Whenua Hou and even the Kermadecs, all of which have been captured beautifully through the lens of her camera. Asked what she enjoyed about this island work, Rose replies, “It’s hard to explain, but when you get off the boat you leave the ordinary world behind, knowing that you have this finite landmass in front of you to discover and explore”.

Rose Collen photographing tūturuatu on Rangatira Island | Mireille Hicks

One thing always leads to another, and in 1996 she was offered a job with the Department of Conservation (DOC) in the ‘Bird Team’ at what is now Pūkaha National Wildlife Centre, a captive breeding facility for endangered bird species. This role gave Rose her grounding in captive management by working across a variety of species, including the tūturuatu, which at the time she had never heard of. At this point in the Shore Plover Recovery Programme, the Isaac Conservation and Wildlife Trust (ICWT) had also joined the captive breeding programme and the first releases on to predator-free islands were underway.

As the facilities gained experience in managing tūturuatu, Rose could see the need for a document that could be a repository for their learnings and to set the minimum standards and best practice. So she compiled a Shore Plover Husbandry Manual which detailed everything from egg incubation to how to hand-raise a chick, weed control in aviaries to daily health monitoring. This allowed teams to avoid reinventing the wheel in isolation of the other captive facilities or when a team member moved on, and put their time and energy towards the important mahi. The manual is a living document, added to as more is learnt, and continues to be a vital part of the recovery programme.

This kind of thinking made Rose the obvious choice for the Shore Plover Captive Management Coordinator role in 2014. Essentially, the role coordinates the captive breeding and release programme across the facilities, which now included Cape Sanctuary. But it also includes maintaining the programme’s records of breeding, output, transfers, deaths and necropsy reports; working with geneticists to minimise inbreeding; coordinating research projects such as the avian pox vaccine trial; updating the Recovery Team, and running annual meetings and audits of the facilities.

Asked what a day in the life of the Captive Coordinator looks like, Rose replies it can be quiet for weeks, then suddenly a WhatsApp conversation will erupt prompting a flurry of activity. A team might need advice about pairings that don’t seem to be working out well, requiring the expertise of the geneticists at the University of Canterbury’s School of Biological Sciences. Or a bird might develop an injury, requiring a trip to see Brett Gartrell and his team of wildlife veterinarians at Wildbase Recovery.

Mireille Hicks, Ilina Cubrinovska, Rose Collen and Nadine Maue on Rangatira Island

The highs for Rose have been seeing the fruits of everyone’s labour when there are stable pairs breeding well, combined with the right release site. This includes the success of Waikawa Island in the Hawke’s Bay, an island that is now almost at capacity with a stable population. The lows included seeing ten years’ worth of hard work disappear with incursions of a single rat, a fate that occurred on both Waikawa and Mana Islands. It took another ten years to rebuild the population on Waikawa, but the same efforts on Mana were thwarted by a recently established kārearea with a taste for tūturuatu.

Rose with Tawapata South Inc shareholders, helicopter pilot, volunteers and DOC rangers on Waikawa Island prior to a tūturuatu release in 2024 | Sheree Smith

As far as the future goes, Rose is incredibly excited about the new aviaries being built at Pūkaha which will improve housing capacity and increase the number of birds for release. Ultimately this requires finding more predator-free islands with suitable tūturuatu habitat, something she will help with as an advisor in the recovery group.

Asked what she loves about tūturuatu, Rose pauses. “I’m trying to think of something that isn’t about how cute they are,” she laughs. “But I guess what amazes me is their adaptability to captivity. Give them the right conditions – fresh clean water to forage in, a safe predator-free environment that mimics their natural habitat, a good diet – and they thrive, producing up to nine chicks a year. Some other bird species are wild to the core and are often looking for ways to escape captivity. In contrast, some tūturuatu we have released into the wild have flown all the way back to their captive breeding facility and asked to be let back inside. They’re lovely to work with and hard-working little dudes!”

Leigh Percasky and Rose Collen checking tūturuatu eggs on Rangatira | DOC

The role is now in the capable hands of the ICWT Wildlife Assistant Manager, Leigh Percasky, whom Rose has worked with for eight years. Asked what he’s looking forward to, he says, “It’s an honour to contribute towards the recovery of tūturuatu. It’s no easy task to follow on from Rose, but I’m looking forward to the challenge! Luckily, she will remain in the recovery group so I can pester her for advice. I’m especially looking forward to being involved in other non-captive parts of the programme, and working more closely with the other captive facilities.”

Of Rose he says, “Rose has made a massive contribution to the Shore Plover Recovery Programme – her perseverance and resilience during some difficult periods over the years is both impressive and inspiring. Tūturuatu are lucky to have Rose fighting on their behalf and are much better off as a result!”

With some more free time on her hands, Rose is looking forward to a holiday then getting back to more fieldwork, starting in Fiordland with mohua / yellowhead. After that, hopefully some monitoring on an island or two. After a long stint having done so much to improve the outcomes of our favourite shorebird, Rose is coming full circle back to the children of Tāne and island life, camera in hand. On behalf of the Shore Plover Recovery Team and our partners, thank you for your incredible mahi Rose.

Whenua Hou | Rose Collen

Tūturuatu Telegraph: a new chapter and a special legacy with Pūkaha National Wildlife Centre | Conservation blog

Source: Department of Conservation

The tūturuatu / tchūriwat’ / shore plover is a bird in need of urgent PR. With just 250 individuals left in the wild on a handful of predator-free islands, it is one of the world’s rarest shore birds, facing issues related to real estate, genetics and a pandemic.

Through collaboration and cooperation with tangata whenua, tchakat henu, community groups, and other stakeholders, the DOC-led Shore Plover Recovery Programme aims to turn the tide on this bird’s fate. The ‘Tūturuatu Telegraph’ takes a closer look at what it takes to bring this unique species back from the brink of extinction.

The Pūkaha National Wildlife Centre (PNWC) has a special legacy with the Shore Plover Recovery Programme, being one of the first facilities to receive wild tūturuatu eggs from Rēkohu / Chatham Islands, in 1981. In this world first, one chick hatched from 13 eggs, surviving for nearly two years. Forty-three years later, the team is looking forward to building a brand new breeding aviary to help ensure the long-term survival of this precious species.

(Left) DOC ranger Alan Munn collecting tūturuatu eggs for transferring to mainland New Zealand from South East Island (Rangatira / Hokoereoro), Rēkohu / Chatham Islands, November 1981.
(Right) Banding tūturuatu – DOC rangers Murray Williams and Hilary Aikman.

Researching the early days of the programme, you can appreciate how far we’ve come in terms of the tools of the trade – cell phones weren’t in common use, portable incubators were temperamental, and the Chatham Island flight service wasn’t exactly something to set your watch by. Further, little was known about the translocation and incubation of tūturuatu eggs – whether it was better to get fresh or partially incubated eggs, and what temperature and humidity the eggs required to hatch.

These issues and variables dominated the early years of the programme when the Chathams Department of Conservation (DOC) team translocated eggs from South East (Rangatira / Hokorereoro) Island to PNWC in the Wairarapa to incubate. After three poor seasons and a 9-year pause in the programme, tweaks were made to the temperature and humidity, lifting later-term rather than fresh eggs, and transporting the eggs to PNWC within a day. By the end of the ‘91/’92 season, 14 out of 17 eggs hatched successfully at Pūkaha and the captive breeding programme as we know it was established.

The inside of one of the now demolished tūturuatu aviaries.

With 14 tūturuatu to suddenly rear, and more importantly, breed, the PNWC team faced a steep learning curve. The first captive pairs formed and produced eggs, and suddenly the feisty nature of territorial males became apparent. Stalking each other between see-through flight divisions resulted in the poor incubation of eggs, and sight screens were placed between pairs to keep them calm.

Gaining experience and momentum, important captive breeding milestones were made in the early days of the breeding programme at Pūkaha. In 1995, the first release of captive-bred tūturuatu was carried out on Motuora Island in the Hauraki Gulf Marine Park / Ko te Pātaka kai o Tikapa Moana. The following season, in a captive-breeding first, a pair raised four chicks in one clutch, while in the ‘96/’97 season, all 21 eggs translocated from Rangatira Island successfully hatched.

However, one of the most important developments for the programme was establishing accurate incubation parameters. This was achieved by measuring incubation temperatures in wild nests on Rangatira Island during the 1996 translocation, establishing optimum temperatures to set incubators and provide the best conditions for hand-rearing chicks. This allowed the team to lift and successfully incubate a fresh clutch of eggs, resulting in the captive pair renesting and producing another clutch of eggs. Producing multiple clutches in a season doubled, and in some cases, tripled productivity. The following season, 30 chicks were produced for both Motuora, and for the first release onto Waikawa (Portland) Island in the Hawke’s Bay. At their most productive point, PNWC had eight breeding pairs and produced 42 juveniles in one season.

Waikawa Island in the Hawke’s Bay. Photo: Rose Collen

It hasn’t all been roses for the PNWC team however. Avian pox, which has plagued the national programme, first showed up in 2002 at Pūkaha and significant resources were spent to construct the first insect-proof shore plover aviaries to reduce the risk of them contracting avian pox via biting insects. However, a paradoxical issue for PNWC was the establishment of endangered kārearea / NZ falcons in the 942ha forest the Centre is located in, following predator control. These avian predators swoop low over the tūturuatu aviaries, scaring the birds who react by flying into the hard wire mesh and suffering trauma injuries. Being the first aviary used for tūturuatu, it was not lined with soft mesh as the newer aviaries at ICWT and Cape Sanctuary are. With considerable deaths and injuries caused, the difficult decision was made in 2022 to abandon the breeding aviaries, which has severely reduced PNWC’s capacity to breed tūturuatu.

Fast-forward two years and exciting plans are afoot to build a new breeding aviary at PNWC, with the team nearing the end of the planning and investigation phase. The new aviary will be fitted with a shade cloth ceiling below the roof, to both limit visibility of the tūturuatu to kārearea, and prevent traumatic injuries to birds inside. PNWC Biodiversity Manager, Christine Reed, explains who and what is involved.

Wayne Ratapu releases a tūturuatu after a health check at Pūkaha National Wildlife Centre. Photo: Tara Swan

“To guide us throughout the process, we have established an advisory group consisting of species experts and conservation breeding specialists from DOC, the Pūkaha Mount Bruce Board and our own team. We’ve also visited The Isaac Conservation & Wildlife Trust and DOC’s Twizel facility to see their aviaries and listen to their experience. Landscape architect Megan Walker from Boffa Miskell has worked with us to produce conceptual and detailed plans for the base of the aviary, generously funded through the NZ Nature FundThe Gift Trust and some pro bono work from Boffa Miskell themselves.”

Once they get the go ahead, their Project Manager, Lester Wolfreys, is confident they can get four breeding compartments built by September this year. This means more capacity in the captive breeding programme for the upcoming season, and more tūturuatu for release onto predator-free islands.

Pūkaha National Wildlife Centre

It’s becoming a tradition to finish these blogs with what our partners love about tūturuatu. Christine, who has a wealth of experience taking the national lead on captive management and the development of wildlife health capacity at DOC in the 1990s, is in a good position to comment.

“Being a small bird, they can be easily overlooked compared with bigger species like the kākāpō or takahē. Despite their size however, they are very endearing with a high level of individuality, and bags of confidence and charisma. We feel privileged to work with this unique and threatened species. With the rebuild of our breeding aviary we are looking forward to getting back up to speed and contributing the numbers of birds for release we once produced for the programme.”   

And what does this mean for you, the visitor? As part of the aviary build, Pūkaha are investigating the use of remote cameras to beam live footage of the birds in the aviary back to the Visitor Centre. If you want to stay in the loop of their plans, and learn more about what Pūkaha National Wildlife Centre does for our native species, sign up to their newsletter.