Seventeen
people took part in the second 5-minute bird count day in four parts of
Great Barrier Island on 30/9/06. The group also searched for bittern,
spotless and marsh crake, using recordings of their calls as ‘lures’.
This activity, taking place at dusk and dawn, is reported below.
The late
afternoon / evening bittern survey was to try to discover if
resident/nesting bittern are present on GBI. Four groups listened for
"booming" at locations around Kaitoke swamp and a further group from DoC
listened at two locations in the Okiwi/Whangapoua swamp area. Two large
brown birds spotted entering a ditch
in Kaitoke Swamp caused a scramble for the binoculars! They were almost
certainly bittern. A boom heard by Fenella Christian near the Golf
Course was also probably bittern. So, a few are still about.
There are
reports of bittern booming in recent years from the Police Station Swamp
(where a bittern was seen in 2003 by Sandra Anderson), and from the
Kaitoke estuary – Wiltshire Lane area, where a young bird was found dead
in c. 2003. Cait Devey reported that bittern were calling in the
wetland off the road beside Kaitoke estuary in 2004. Des Casey reported
that Dave Harland had seen one on Speck’s farm at Windy Hill this year.
Since the bird-count Amanda Yates and Emma Hunt have seen "a large brown
shag-like bird" on the Kaitoke creek.
Bittern was
formerly much commoner on Great Barrier (Bell 1976; Ogle 1981.) In 1980
it was seen or heard in March-April at five locations: Kaitoke swamp,
Whangapoua Estuary, Motairehe, Oruawharua Bay and near Okiwi airstrip.
It was present at Awana before the coastal swamps were drained and
converted into pasture (M. Curreen). I know of no records from the
northern part of the island since 1980, although at that time it was
almost certainly breeding in the Whangapoua swamp and at Motairehe.
Currently bitterns appears to be vagrants, with the last likely breeding
in 2004 at Kaitoke. If anyone out there has further information about
bitterns on GBI, please get in touch!
At dawn on
October 1st groups were located at four locations around Kaitoke swamp
and played recorded calls of spotless and marsh crakes (lures) on a
motley selection of old tape-decks. The DoC-led group did the same in
the Whangapoua area. Spotless crake responded positively to taped calls
at three locations around Kaitoke swamp. At one site there was vigorous
"churring" from two or three birds, and one came out of the reeds to
inspect the tape recorder (and Emma Hunt) so identification was
absolutely positive. Spotless crake was first recorded at Kaitoke swamp
by Colin Ogle in 1980 and later by Anderson & Ogden (2003). The former
also recorded it at Whangapoua, but noted its diminishing habitat due to
swamp drainage there. No responses to our lures were obtained in
the Whangapoua area (Halema Jamieson). Marsh crake has not yet
been positively identified on Great Barrier island, and no definitive
evidence was discovered this time either .
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The work was funded from the Biodiversity Advice Fund of Department of
Conservation (AV207). Des Casey, Halema Jamieson and Fenella Christian
are thanked for help in local organization. Cait Devey, Peter Edmunds,
Emma Hunt, Halema Jamieson, Ezra Kendall, Deborah Mayson, Hillarey
McGregor, Chris Sullivan, Jenni Ogden, Steve Oxborough, Alan Phelps, Emmy
Pratt, Bruno and Sue Reusser, Dale and Maioha Tawa, Bert Vowden, Duane
Walker, Karen Walker and Amanda Yates are thanked for devoting a
Saturday and/or Sunday morning to this work, and for keeping up
observations in the interim.
REFERENCES
The Report
of the Second GBICT Bird Count can be obtained by communicating with the
Trust or John Ogden directly.