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New Zealand Rockwren

A species of Rockwren and Bushwren, Also known as South Island Rockwren, Nz Rock Wren
Scientific name : Xenicus gilviventris Genus : Rockwren and Bushwren

New Zealand Rockwren, A species of Rockwren and Bushwren
Also known as:
South Island Rockwren, Nz Rock Wren
Botanical name: Xenicus gilviventris
Genus: Rockwren and Bushwren
New Zealand Rockwren (Xenicus gilviventris) Photo By Francesco Veronesi , used under CC-BY-SA-2.0 /Cropped and compressed from original

Description

The rock wren is a very small, almost tailless bird that prefers to hop and run on its long legs, and uses its rounded wings to fly only short distances. Males are 16 g, females 20 g. Males are greenish with yellow flanks and a pale underside, females tend to be browner, although the degree of difference between the sexes varies geographically.
Size
9 cm
Feeding Habits
New Zealand Rockwren primarily consumes insects such as beetles, orthopterans, and spiders, with occasional seeds, berries, and nectar. It dismembers large prey before swallowing and may cache food. Foraging occurs on the ground or in vegetation, often in pairs, using gleaning and aerial sallies.
Habitat
The new Zealand Rockwren primarily resides in alpine and subalpine habitats, ranging from 900 to 2500 meters in altitude. This avian species, unique as the only true alpine bird in its region, prefers rocky environments replete with sheltering rock formations, dense low scrub, and areas of scree and fellfield near the treeline. Despite the harsh conditions and prolonged snow cover typical of these elevations, the new Zealand Rockwren does not migrate to lower regions in winter but is adapted to forage and find refuge underneath the snow layer, often in proximity to water sources like streams.
Dite type
Insectivorous

General Info

Behavior

The rock wren is a poor flier, rarely flying more than 2 m off the ground or for distances of more than 30 m. It prefers to hop and run with distinctive bobbing and wing flicks. Its call is three high-pitched notes, and pairs sometimes duet. Pairs maintain a year-round territory, and work together to build a large enclosed nest with an entrance tunnel. The nest is lined with feathers, often from other species of birds. Guthrie-Smith recovered 791 feathers from one nest in the 1930s, most from weka, but including some kiwi, kakapo, kea, and kereru. (Rock wrens are such assiduous collectors of feathers that their nests have been checked for kakapo feathers, to determine if those endangered parrots are in the area.) Around three eggs are laid in late spring and incubated for three weeks. Chicks take about 24 days to fledge and are fed for at least 4 weeks. Rock wrens mostly eat invertebrates on the ground, but will sometimes take berries and seeds, and even nectar from flax flowers.

Distribution Area

This species is currently confined to alpine and subalpine zones (900–2500 m altitude) of the Southern Alps, the Tasman Mountains of Northwest Nelson, and the Victoria Range of Westland, all in the South Island; it is New Zealand's only truly alpine bird. Subfossil remains suggest before Polynesian settlement it was also found in lowland forest and in the North Island. Its current alpine distribution is a habitat where few rodents can survive, full of sheltering rocks and dense vegetation.Their preferred habitat is close to the treeline, amongst rockfalls, scree, fellfield, and low scrub. Rock wrens, unlike many alpine birds, do not migrate to lower elevations in winter; instead, they seem to shelter and forage in rockfalls beneath the snow layer.

Species Status

Writing in the 1930s, Herbert Guthrie-Smith declared, Xenicus gilviventris, I am glad to think, is one of the species likely to survive changes that from the forester’s and field naturalist’s point of view have desolated New Zealand. The ravages wrought elsewhere by deer, rabbits, opossums, birds, and other imported vermin are unlikely to affect the welfare of the rock wren. Even weasels and rats — and I know they ascend to great heights — are hardly likely to draw sufficient recompense in prey from such unpeopled solitudes.… With cover and food supplies unmodified, the rock wren may be considered relatively safe. This was not to be. Since European settlement, rock wrens have become more patchy in their distribution; a study of over 2,100 sightings between 1912 and 2005 showed the area they inhabit had declined significantly since the 1980s. In the Murchison Mountains, rock wren showed a 44% decline in abundance over 20 years. The main threats to rock wrens are stoats and mice, which eat their eggs and young: A 2012–13 study in the upper Hollyford showed that most rock wren nests were being preyed upon by stoats. Predator trapping improved daily survival rates, egg hatching and fledgling rates of rock wrens. The long-term effect of climate change on their alpine habitat is also a threat, as warmer temperatures will allow rats to move higher into the mountains. In 2008–2010, a total of 40 rock wrens were translocated to Secretary Island, an 8140 ha rodent-free island in Fiordland, the third-tallest island in New Zealand. In 2010 a survey located 12 unbanded rock wrens, indicating they were successfully breeding.
New Zealand Rockwren (Xenicus gilviventris) New Zealand Rockwren (Xenicus gilviventris) Photo By Francesco Veronesi , used under CC-BY-SA-2.0 /Cropped and compressed from original
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