<p>New Zealand's treasured kiwi birds are shuffling around Wellington's verdant hills for the first time in a century, after a drive to eliminate invasive predators from the capital's surrounds.</p>.<p>Visitors to New Zealand a millennium ago would have encountered a bona fide "birdtopia" -- islands teeming with feathered creatures fluttering through life unaware that mammalian predators existed.</p>.<p>The arrival of Polynesian voyagers in the 1200s and Europeans a few hundred years later changed all that.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/science-and-environment/a-sneak-peek-into-the-bird-s-beak-1213816.html" target="_blank">A sneak peek into the bird’s beak</a></strong></p>.<p>Rats picked off snipe-rails and petrels, mice chewed through all the seeds and berries they could find, leaving little for native birds to peck on.</p>.<p>Possums -- introduced for fur -- stripped trees bare. Rabbits bred like, well, rabbits, devouring meadows and paddocks alike.</p>.<p>Heaping disaster upon disaster, stoats were introduced to kill the rabbits but instead killed wrens, thrushes, owls and quails.</p>.<p>The population of native flightless birds like the kakapo and kiwi plummeted.</p>.<p>The Department of Conservation estimates there are only around 70,000 wild kiwi left in New Zealand.</p>.<p>Despite the bird being a beloved national symbol, few New Zealanders have seen one in the wild.</p>.<p>However, numbers are rising again thanks to more than 90 community initiatives working nationwide to protect them.</p>.<p>One such group is The Capital Kiwi Project, a charitable trust backed by millions of dollars from government grants and private donations.</p>.<p>"Ever since people came to New Zealand, we have had a special connection to the kiwi," founder and project leader Paul Ward told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/science-and-environment/worlds-oldest-tree-able-to-reveal-planets-secrets-1211952.html" target="_blank">World's 'oldest' tree able to reveal planet's secrets</a></strong></p>.<p>"They are central to Maori myth. Our sports teams, our rugby league teams, our defence force and, even when we go overseas, we are known as kiwis.</p>.<p>"They are tough, resilient, adaptable, all values we think of as New Zealanders, but most of us have never seen a kiwi before."</p>.<p>Ward estimates wild kiwi last roamed the Wellington area more than a century ago.</p>.<p>The bid to save them required a sustained conservation effort.</p>.<p>The project had to first deal with the kiwi's natural enemies prowling through the undergrowth.</p>.<p>Local dog owners were invited to sessions to teach their pets to steer clear of kiwi while out for walks.</p>.<p>The project also had to declare war on stoats.</p>.<p>An adult kiwi can fight off a stoat using its powerful legs and sharp claws but a chick has no chance, Ward explained.</p>.<p>The project laid a huge network of 4,500 traps over an area equivalent to nearly 43,000 football pitches on the hills surrounding Wellington. The traps have claimed 1,000 stoats so far.</p>.<p>After "blitzing stoats", as Ward puts it, the predator population was low enough for the project to release the first batch of kiwi last November.</p>.<p>The birds were carefully transported nearly 500 kilometres (310 miles) from a captive breeding programme to a Wellington school, where they were welcomed by a traditional Maori ceremony.</p>.<p>Ward said a hush came over the 400-strong crowd as they caught their first glimpse of a kiwi when the first bird was released.</p>.<p>"The power of that moment was palpable," he said. "Our job is to bottle that and spread it across the hills of Wellington."</p>.<p>Regular check-ups show that the first wave is thriving.</p>.<p>"Two months after we released the birds, we were ecstatic to discover they had gained weight," Ward said.</p>.<p>"One had put on 400 grams -- that's a considerable weight gain even for a human over Christmas or Easter. There's plenty of food for them on these hillsides."</p>.<p>Ward said the goal is to release 250 birds over the next five years to establish a large wild kiwi population.</p>.<p>He wants their distinctive shrill cry to become part of everyday life on the outskirts of the capital.</p>.<p>"It's our duty to look after the animal that's gifted us its name," Ward said.</p>.<p>"As one of our volunteers said, 'if we can't look after the thing we're named after we deserve to be renamed idiots'."</p>
<p>New Zealand's treasured kiwi birds are shuffling around Wellington's verdant hills for the first time in a century, after a drive to eliminate invasive predators from the capital's surrounds.</p>.<p>Visitors to New Zealand a millennium ago would have encountered a bona fide "birdtopia" -- islands teeming with feathered creatures fluttering through life unaware that mammalian predators existed.</p>.<p>The arrival of Polynesian voyagers in the 1200s and Europeans a few hundred years later changed all that.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/science-and-environment/a-sneak-peek-into-the-bird-s-beak-1213816.html" target="_blank">A sneak peek into the bird’s beak</a></strong></p>.<p>Rats picked off snipe-rails and petrels, mice chewed through all the seeds and berries they could find, leaving little for native birds to peck on.</p>.<p>Possums -- introduced for fur -- stripped trees bare. Rabbits bred like, well, rabbits, devouring meadows and paddocks alike.</p>.<p>Heaping disaster upon disaster, stoats were introduced to kill the rabbits but instead killed wrens, thrushes, owls and quails.</p>.<p>The population of native flightless birds like the kakapo and kiwi plummeted.</p>.<p>The Department of Conservation estimates there are only around 70,000 wild kiwi left in New Zealand.</p>.<p>Despite the bird being a beloved national symbol, few New Zealanders have seen one in the wild.</p>.<p>However, numbers are rising again thanks to more than 90 community initiatives working nationwide to protect them.</p>.<p>One such group is The Capital Kiwi Project, a charitable trust backed by millions of dollars from government grants and private donations.</p>.<p>"Ever since people came to New Zealand, we have had a special connection to the kiwi," founder and project leader Paul Ward told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/science-and-environment/worlds-oldest-tree-able-to-reveal-planets-secrets-1211952.html" target="_blank">World's 'oldest' tree able to reveal planet's secrets</a></strong></p>.<p>"They are central to Maori myth. Our sports teams, our rugby league teams, our defence force and, even when we go overseas, we are known as kiwis.</p>.<p>"They are tough, resilient, adaptable, all values we think of as New Zealanders, but most of us have never seen a kiwi before."</p>.<p>Ward estimates wild kiwi last roamed the Wellington area more than a century ago.</p>.<p>The bid to save them required a sustained conservation effort.</p>.<p>The project had to first deal with the kiwi's natural enemies prowling through the undergrowth.</p>.<p>Local dog owners were invited to sessions to teach their pets to steer clear of kiwi while out for walks.</p>.<p>The project also had to declare war on stoats.</p>.<p>An adult kiwi can fight off a stoat using its powerful legs and sharp claws but a chick has no chance, Ward explained.</p>.<p>The project laid a huge network of 4,500 traps over an area equivalent to nearly 43,000 football pitches on the hills surrounding Wellington. The traps have claimed 1,000 stoats so far.</p>.<p>After "blitzing stoats", as Ward puts it, the predator population was low enough for the project to release the first batch of kiwi last November.</p>.<p>The birds were carefully transported nearly 500 kilometres (310 miles) from a captive breeding programme to a Wellington school, where they were welcomed by a traditional Maori ceremony.</p>.<p>Ward said a hush came over the 400-strong crowd as they caught their first glimpse of a kiwi when the first bird was released.</p>.<p>"The power of that moment was palpable," he said. "Our job is to bottle that and spread it across the hills of Wellington."</p>.<p>Regular check-ups show that the first wave is thriving.</p>.<p>"Two months after we released the birds, we were ecstatic to discover they had gained weight," Ward said.</p>.<p>"One had put on 400 grams -- that's a considerable weight gain even for a human over Christmas or Easter. There's plenty of food for them on these hillsides."</p>.<p>Ward said the goal is to release 250 birds over the next five years to establish a large wild kiwi population.</p>.<p>He wants their distinctive shrill cry to become part of everyday life on the outskirts of the capital.</p>.<p>"It's our duty to look after the animal that's gifted us its name," Ward said.</p>.<p>"As one of our volunteers said, 'if we can't look after the thing we're named after we deserve to be renamed idiots'."</p>