New Zealand fights to save its flightless national bird
Wild kiwi birds have returned to Wellington's hills after a century-long absence. Invasive predators had nearly decimated the population of native birds in New Zealand, but more than 90 community initiatives working nationwide have brought the population back. \n \nThe Capital Kiwi Project, a charitable trust, laid 4,500 traps and released kiwi birds last November after "blitzing" stoats. \n \nThe goal is to release 250 birds over the next five years to establish a large wild kiwi population.

WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND -- New Zealand's treasured kiwi birds are shuffling around Wellington's verdant hills for the first time in a century, after a drive to eliminate invasive predators from the capital's surrounds. Visitors to New Zealand a millennium ago would have encountered a bona fide "birdtopia" -- islands teeming with feathered creatures fluttering through life unaware that mammalian predators existed. The arrival of Polynesian voyagers in the 1200s and Europeans a few hundred years later changed all that. Rats picked off snipe-rails and petrels, mice chewed through all the seeds and berries they could find, leaving little for native birds to peck on. Possums -- introduced for fur -- stripped trees bare. Rabbits bred like, well, rabbits, devouring meadows and paddocks alike. Heaping disaster upon disaster, stoats were introduced to kill the rabbits but instead killed wrens, thrushes, owls and quails. The population of native flightless birds like the kakapo and kiwi plummeted. The Department of Conservation estimates there are only around 70,000 wild kiwi left in New Zealand. Despite the bird being a beloved national symbol, few New Zealanders have seen one in the wild. However, numbers are rising again thanks to more than 90 community initiatives working nationwide to protect them. One such group is The Capital Kiwi Project, a charitable trust backed by millions of dollars from government grants and private donations.











