Kiwi watchers have recorded the sound of the bird’s song at many sites that were silent just five years ago

It’s a frigid, early-winter night, and across the forests and farmlands of Northland, people are crouching in the dark. They’ve timed this night for the waning moon, so moonlight doesn’t disturb any visitors. Scattered through the night, they sit, silently, and listen.

The sound they’re all hoping for is a high-pitched, piercing cry, or guttural croak – a sign that Aotearoa’s threatened, iconic kiwi has returned to patches of forests that had fallen silent.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Tricky: ‘I was less nervous going to prison than I was getting on stage’

As his debut Maxinquaye gets reissued, the Bristolian music legend answers your…

Fair play, Musk v Zuckerberg – as a bleat for attention, a megarich-weirdo cage fight is hard to top | Marina Hyde

It’s an irresistible dystopian image, though one that seems as likely to…

America’s gun debate – why we’re getting it so wrong | podcast

Abené Clayton, a reporter on the Guardian’s Guns and Lies in America…