New Zealand Birds
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- čas přidán 5. 06. 2024
- 🐦✨ Birds of New Zealand: A Yearlong Symphony
Embark on a visual journey through the stunning avian diversity of New Zealand. Recorded over the course of a year in 2019, this video showcases 25 indigenous bird species, many of which are endemic to New Zealand.
These birds were mostly photographed in their natural habitats and a small number in the Mount Bruce wild life centre.
Notable Birds Featured:
Blue Duck: Unique and rare, inhabiting swift mountain streams.
Australasian Gannet: Large seabird with distinctive features, nesting on coastal cliffs.
Silvereye: Abundant bird recognizable by its distinctive white eye-ring.
Robin: Confiding bird found in mature forests and scrublands.
Kokako: Known for its haunting song, with blue-grey body and wattles.
Kiwi: Nocturnal and iconic, unbothered by red light.
Kereru: Large, iridescent bird with various shades of green, purple, and bronze.
Shag: Mostly marine species, nesting on coastal cliffs or in sea caves.
Bellbird: Green with a forked tail, important in pollinating native flowers.
Fantail: Endemic with a fanned tail and distinctive song.
Kaka: Large, endemic parrots with reduced range due to habitat loss.
Kingfisher: Distinctive bird with green-blue back and large black bill.
Ruru (Morepork): Small, cute, dark-brown owl with a distinctive call.
Dotterel: Familiar bird of sandy east coast beaches, breeding in monogamous pairs.
Royal Spoonbill: Large waterbird with a distinctive spoon-shaped bill.
Hihi: Endemic songbirds with fast movements and vibrant colors in males.
Tomtit: Widespread bird with yellow and/or orange coloration in males.
Tui: Locally abundant bird known for its fine white feathers on the neck.
Weka: Flightless, inquisitive bird, sometimes tame, known for snatching food.
White-Faced Heron: Tall, elegant bird often seen stalking prey in various habitats.
Kakariki: Small, bright green, noisy parrots residing in forest canopies.
With voices overs by 15 friends, this compilation captures the essence of New Zealand's avian wonders. 🌿🎶
#birds #newzealand #endemic
0:00 Presentation
0:31 Whio - Blue Duck
0:59 Kereru - NZ Pigeon
1:18 Takapu - Gannet
1:38 Putangitangi - Paradise Duck
2:02 Toutouwai - NZ Robin
2:19 Hihi - Stitchbird
2:39 Tui
3:05 Kokako
3:24 Kiwi
3:46 Tauhou - Silvereye
4:05 Torea Pango - Oystercatcher
4:27 Miromiro - Tomtit
4:50 Ruru - Morepork
5:10 Piwakawaka - Fantail
5:27 Kaka
5:49 Pihoihoi
6:07 Weka
6:40 Pukeko
7:02 Kawau - Shag
7:24 Korimako - Bellbird
7:43 Tuturiwhatu - Dotterel
8:00 Kotuku Ngutupapa - Royal Spoonbill
8:25 Kotare - Kingfisher
8:47 Matuku Moana - White Faced Heron
9:04 Kakariki - Yellow-Crowned Parakeet - Krátké a kreslené filmy
Tui - song are rarely the same / Fantail like flying around people because people stir the insects, they also come into country houses looking for easy insects meals
Lovely video! I remember whistling to the bellbirds during my bushwalks in NZ, the melodies they sung seemed to be specific to the region they were in. I miss all the bush noises!
Thanks for your comment.
Kakariki are also found in th far north as well ... opua Forrest has a whole flock of them especially in waimangaroa valley where my whenua is .....they feed with my uncles chickens ...amazing birds
Thanks for your comment. I've never been to Opua forrest. Your whenua looks like an amazing place.
Thank you for putting this together!
Living on a boat at Kawau Island, just north of Auckland in the Hauraki Gulf. Just wanted to identify the loud bird calls we hear every morning and evening. Very helpful video. Great work.
Thanks for your comment. Perhaps someone can help you to recognise this bird. You’re lucky to live in this place.
the miromiro is a magnificent bird
i love this bird
Nicely put together . Well, done .
Informative
Birds and Video Fascinating, lovely that Maori names are highlighted in these species
and looking forward for more!
Thanks Linda for your comment.
Hmmm I regonize these same pictures on a book before. In the beginning. Cool!
A very well made collection, thank you.
Thank you too!
Super mind blowing
Nice one
This is a very good collection of native birds. Could I point out that the range map for pihoihoi seems to be wrong as it is also found in central North Island.
Thanks James. You're right : nzbirdsonline.org.nz/sites/all/files/Maps_for_website_6MAR09%20243.pdf. My mistake!
@@NicolasPerrot11 The fantail range is also wrong.
This was beautiful and very informative.
Thank you so much. I’m on a other project now, birds in Nepal…
Good very good shandhar
Thank you very much
Very nice! Theres this bird I hear every night and it's driving me crazy. Not because its noisy but rather I dont know what it is lol. I been literally spending most nights trying to identify this noisy bugger.
Hi! Finally, what bird wake you up during the night?
@@NicolasPerrot11 that's the thing, I have no idea!
Can you record the bird noise and email it to me? I can search for it.
@@NicolasPerrot11 OH YES, that sounds perfect. Guess I'll have to stay up late tonight, lol.
@@NicolasPerrot11 Hi I have the same problem ! Could I send you a recording of the bird ? thank you haha
I love bird
What bird sounds like a truck backing up, it's loud, bird is a km away
A kiwi ? A pukeko ?
@@NicolasPerrot11 others have said tui or bellbird...so I still don't know 🤣 have to get a photo of it somehow
@@aaronleylander5262 For sure Aaron, good luck to shoot it :)
The Weka... Should be New Zealand's real National bird..
Friendly, Intelligent, eyes that look right through you....
Stand on a beach near one and it will go on about it's business, not running away... Catch its eye and it look you right back, checking you out...
Lift a stone and it will stroll on over, taking time to look you in the eye, then making a meal of anything you uncovered...
These characters will flip the lid off your chilli bin and make off with your bread bag.
I'm sure if they could, one would tie your shoe laces, another get your attention so you fell over while another whipped off with your wallet...
I also notice that when with a youngster, the mum will eat something, forage for the next, then hold still while the youngster darts out, takes the morsel from the mums beak and only then does the mum reanimate and go looking for the next meal.
Weka are very abundant around Picton. A bit like a chicken with an IQ of 150...
Nice writing. I notice the weka were very abondant around Nelson :)
waw buautyful
Takapu gannet
Hey i'm doing a uni project where i've designed a contraption that translates bird song, can I please include snippets of this in it? I will credit you!!
Of course you can. I’m very pleased to share this video. I wonder how work the bird translator!!
I've seen healthy number of Weka around kawakawa Bay, South Eastern Auckland. Funny it wasn't on the NZ map.
Thanks your comment. I copied a map from the website nzbirdsonline which doesn’t show Weka around kawakawa bay. It seems to be time to update this map !
@@NicolasPerrot11 yep, but we mustn't let this map fall into the hands(?) of mustelids. Cunning little pirates they are.
You’re right lol
I have some of theses birds in nelson before..
Many pictures were taken around Nelson.
@@NicolasPerrot11 i saw that i thought that was amazing to see how many native birds there were around my hometown..
Can anyone tell me what the name of the bird is that I hear just before rain.
Could be riroriro.
Weka are the best 😊
For me, it’s the Kokako 😆
@@NicolasPerrot11 they are also great!
You forgot some the NZ Hawk and the NZ Falcon
Yeah, I forgot many birds
@@NicolasPerrot11that’s alright
Tieke?
During my year in NZ, I didn't have the chance to meet a tieke.
As a white nzer I think more moari pronunciation would make thus video better.
It doesn't take much to learn to say these words correctly and once learned you will enjoy knowing and using these words
Right, thanks for your advice.
Exactly 🤷♂️
Spelling Māori correctly would be a good start
Your distribution maps are a bit out. We have Tui, Piwakawaka, and Kakariki around Dunedin.
I took it in a book, perhaps there was some mistakes or there was an evolution of the presence of these birds in Dunedin. Wasn’t in Dunedin when I made the video.
@@NicolasPerrot11 OK, just parroting the errors of others.
Ah, an expert critique on my last name, that caught me off guard! 😄 But I have to admit, that's quite creative. Thanks for the entertaining moment! As for the video, I hope you still enjoyed it. Feel free to keep sharing your thoughts !
@@NicolasPerrot11 😉
You try to give the video more brightness it will be great if you do
I guess it’s too late to modify the brightness on YT.
@@NicolasPerrot11 it looks great to me ❤
Taohou silverye
Beautiful video...get rid of the voices though....
Pukekos aren’t actually a New Zealand bird, they are found in many other countries. But the Takahe are native birds to New Zealand and look very much like the pukeko but much larger and cannot fly.
I was shocked to see them in Australia! Always thought they were exclusively NZ birds
@@andrewford80
Yeah 19 year old me thought the same.
@@andrewford80 don't feel too bad - it wasn't until recently that I learned we have wallabies in NZ too!
Pukekos are native similar species in Australia. Do you think they flew here?
@@MrNoodlesforall
Dude it's not that hard, look it up.
You search Pukekos and they'll come up as "the australasian swamphen" the species literally came from Australia. They flew to nz whenever but technically the same species as the swamphens as in aus.
I get species that are linked (I call them distant cousins), like hawks and eagles, lizards, spiders and takahes are distant relatives to pukekos. But these aren't that. Unless your someone who has an understanding of this kind of stuff. Then your welcome to prove me wrong.
Kotare
You should really get a Maori to pronounce the Maori words, so that people can hear both the native names and the foreign names pronounced properly.
Facts
Bro you didn't say kererū properly!
This small presentation has been read by a Kiwi. How should we pronounce it?
It's the way you roll the R" like a D" tongue goes to the roof of mouth when pronouncing "R
See how you go 🙂
So what!!
@@NicolasPerrot11properly
@@NicolasPerrot11if you can pronounce tiddies, you can roll the r, no excuses, kiwi or not