New Zealand Little Bittern | |
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New Zealand Little Bittern (Adult male & Juv. male) | |
Conservation status | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Aves |
Order: | Pelecaniformes |
Family: | Ardeidae |
Genus: | Ixobrychus |
Species: | I. novaezelandiae |
Binomial name | |
Ixobrychus novaezelandiae (A. C. Purdie, 1871) |
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Synonyms | |
Ardea pusilla Vieill, 1817 |
The New Zealand Little Bittern (Ixobrychus novaezelandiae) is an extinct and enigmatic species of heron in the Ardeidae family. It was endemic to New Zealand and was last recorded alive in the 1890s.[2]
Common names for this species include New Zealand Bittern, Spotted Heron, and Kaoriki (Maori).[3] The scientific species name also has numerous junior synonyms.[3]
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The species has sometimes been regarded as a subspecies of Little Bittern (Ixobrychus minutus), or conspecific with the Australian Little Bittern, though it was first described by Alexander Callender Purdie[2] in 1871 as Ardeola Novae Zelandiae.[4][5] In 1980 New Zealand paleontologist Peter L. Horn found subfossil bones of a bittern from Lake Poukawa which he named Dupetor flavicollis. In 1991 Philip Millener identified Horn’s material as remains of the New Zealand Little Bittern.[6]
Although a small bittern, the species was larger (length about 14.75 inches (38 cm)[5]) than the Little Bittern (25–36 cm). Few specimens are known, and of these there is even doubt about the sex of some, making published descriptions unreliable. Differences from Little Bittern include a larger buff patch on the upperwing, black upperparts streaked light brown, underparts streaked dark brown and rufous-buff.[7]
In recent times the bird is only known with certainty to have inhabited the South Island of New Zealand, with most records from Westland. Although subfossil remains have been found in the North Island, reports of living birds may have been of misidentified Australasian Bitterns. The first scientific specimen was reportedly obtained at Tauranga in the North Island by a Reverend Mr Stack in 1836, but is now untraceable. The holotype specimen in the Museum of New Zealand was taken from the head of Lake Wakatipu in Otago.[8] Recorded habitat for the species includes the wooded margins of saline lagoons and creeks.[7][9]
Walter Buller quotes a Mr Docherty, who was familiar with the bird in Westland:
"They are to be found on the salt-water lagoons on the seashore, always hugging the timbered side of the same. I have seen them in two positions, viz.:— standing on the bank of the lagoon, with their heads bent forward, studiously watching the water; at other times I have seen them standing straight up, almost perpendicular; I should say this is the proper position for the bird to be placed in when stuffed. When speaking of lagoons as the places where they are to be found, I may mention that I caught one about two miles in the bush, on the bank of a creek; but the creek led to a lagoon. They live on small fishes or the roots of reeds; I should say the latter, because at the very place where I caught one I observed the reeds turned up and the roots gone. They are very solitary, and always found alone, and they stand for hours in one place. I heard a person say that he had opened one and found a large egg in it. They breed on the ground in very obscure places; I never heard their cry."[10]
The bittern is recorded as eating mudfish and worms in captivity, when given in water.[9]
Two calls were recorded by Buller, a "peculiar snapping cry" as an alarm call, and a "cry not unlike that of a kingfisher, though not so loud".[7]