It’s not often that ornithological conservationists draw comparisons to wild west sheriffs, but extreme times call for extreme measures, and a group of committed New Zealand volunteers are hoping for a miracle.
Kōkakos – large, long-legged songbirds with a haunting call – once flocked through New Zealand’s ancient forests, but their numbers plummeted catastrophically after human settlement. Numbers of the North Island Kōkako, which has a blue wattle, have to some extent recovered, but ecologists are anxiously searching the South Island for its orange-wattled relative which many fear is lost for ever. A NZ$10,000 ($7,000) reward is being offered for a sighting.
The most recent accepted sighting of a South Island Kōkako was in 2007, near Reefton and, before that, at Mt Aspiring in 1967. The Department of Conservation (DOC)…
