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New Zealand fairy tern

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New Zealand fairy tern

Nationally Critical (NZ TCS)
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S. n. davisae
Trinomial name
Sternula nereis davisae

The New Zealand fairy tern (Sternula nereis davisae), also known as the tara-iti,[1] is a small tern which breeds on the lower half of the Northland Peninsula of the North Island of New Zealand. It is the smallest tern breeding in New Zealand and is a subspecies of the fairy tern.

Breeding is limited to four regular sites: Waipu, Mangawhai, Pakiri and the South Kaipara Head.[1] The wintering range of the birds extends over the Kaipara Harbour. Outside of the breeding season fairy terns form flocks on the harbour, often around Tapora.

The number of birds plummeted to three pairs in 1983 but intensive conservation efforts were put in place and numbers increased so that in 1998 the population totalled some 25 to 30 birds with 10 to 12 breeding pairs spread over three breeding sites. Numbers have continued to increase and by 2006 had reached 30 to 40 individuals including 12 breeding pairs. Five years later, numbers have increased again to 40 to 45 individuals and around 10 breeding pairs.[2]

With a total population of fewer than fifty individuals including just ten breeding pairs, the IUCN rates this species as "Critically Endangered".[2] A New Zealand government source considers that this bird is "probably New Zealand's most endangered indigenous breeding bird."[1] It nests on sand and shell banks just above high tide mark and nesting is highly vulnerable to introduced predators, domestic animals, storms, very high tides and disturbance by humans on foot and in vehicles on the beach. The bird is further threatened by a proposed residential subdivision at Te Arai, next to one of its prime breeding sites.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c "New Zealand fairy tern/tara-iti". New Zealand Department of Conservation. Retrieved 19 July 2012.
  2. ^ a b "Species factsheet: Sterna nereis". BirdLife International. Retrieved 2013-12-17.
  3. ^ Dowling, J. E. (April 2006). "Potential impacts on shorebirds of a proposed subdivision at Te Arai, North Auckland" (PDF). DM Consultants. p. 5. Retrieved 19 July 2012.