1. Paradise Shelduck Putangitangi. The most widely distributed and second-most abundant waterfowl in New Zealand. The male has a black head with slight green shimmer, and the female has a white head and upper neck. A game species, at least 200,000 are hunted down every year.
2. New Zealand Scaup Papango. A diving duck with a wide though patchy distribution throughout North and South Islands. This generally dark bird floats on water with easy buoyancy and can stay for long periods underwater, whilst also travelling great distances. Male has dark black plumage and yellow iris. Female is duller brown with brown iris. Seen in sheltered areas of lakes and bays and lagoons in Otago and Southland.
Papango from Queenstown Bay.
3. New Zealand Falcon Karearea. A compact raptor with long tail and wings, streaky cream-and-brown breast and reddish-brown undertail. Very adapted to hunt within the dense New Zealand forests but are also found in more open areas such as tussock grasslands, farms and grazing hilly country. Its rounded tail and the rapid beats of its pointed wings are notable in flight. Feeds predominantly on live prey such as smaller birds like passerines and rarely on roadkill. On the slopes of Roy’s Peak, it was quite an amazing sight, seeing a speeding graceful falcon in flight, gliding and chasing sparrows with wings set flat. Another falcon was seen from the CBD bay beach in downtown Queenstown.
Karearea from open country around Mossburn.
4. Weka. A large, flightless mostly light brown rail with red eyes and a broad pointed bill. Extinct over large tracts of the mainland due to predation and climate change. Weka are a curious omnivorous species and often seen scavenging around people and tourists, like this boss roaming around a carpark in Milford Sound (Piopiotahi), the most famous destination in New Zealand.
Weka, the mayor of main street Milford Sound.
5. Variable Oystercatcher Torea Pango. This shorebird has a distinctively long and bright orange bill. The adult has black upperparts, its underparts colors ranging from all black to pied, with different morphs in between. Diet includes a wide range of littoral and terrestrial invertebrates. Torea Pango from the foreshores of the eighth Wonder of the World- Piopiotahi (Milford Sound) fiord.
6. Black-billed Gull Tarapuka. A pale gull mostly white with light gray wings and back, long thin black bill and black or reddish-black legs. This species mostly breeds on inland braided riverbeds in the South Island (only around 5% nest in the North Island). The numbers of this gull have rapidly declined but still seen most everywhere throughout Otago and Southland regions.
Tarapuka from Queenstown and Milford Sound.
7. Black-fronted Tern Tarapirohe. A familiar tern of the eastern South Island. Breeding plumage is a black cap extending down to the bill and bright orange bill and legs. This bird breeds only on the braided riverbeds of the eastern and southern South Island.
This Tarapirohe was flying over farmlands in Lowther, Southland.
8. White-fronted Tern Tara. Tern with a long pointed black bill and long forked tail. Its black cap is delineated by a white band from its black bill. Non-breeding adults and juveniles have a white frons created by a reduced black cap cover. Fairly common along coastlines around New Zealand including in Milford Sound as the photos show.
Juvenile and adult Tara below.
9. New Zealand Pigeon Kereru. Large pigeon with distinctive bright blue-green plumage, white belly, and red eye. Widely distributed throughout the country. Threatened by introduced stoats, feral cats and ship rats.
This one Kereru sighting was from the thick eastern cliff forests of
the world’s top travel destination- Piopiotahi (Milford Sound).
10. Grey Warbler Riroriro. A small, slim warbler most widely distributed endemic bird and common throughout New Zealand. Gray-brown above and paler gray to off-white below. Tail is darker, tipped with white, most noticeable in flight. An entirely insectivorous species, it is typically seen in the lower canopies of forests foraging on tree trunks and branches for insects.
Riroriro above from Routeburn Track trailhead in Fiordland NP,
and below from Queenstown Gardens.
11. Brown Creeper Pipipi. A small, noisy songbird, found only in South and Stewart Islands. Favors different forest types. It has brown upperparts with an ashy-gray face and neck, and pale creamy-brown underparts. Often located first by its chattering contact calls and songs. Brown creepers are insectivorous, sometimes foraging upside down.
South Island endemic Pipipi seen in forest canopy in Glenorchy.
12. Tui. This species has a dark sheen of blue, purple, and green but easily distinguished by a bow tie of two curled white feather tufts (“poi”). Found throughout much of New Zealand often venturing into suburban parks, farmland, and rural gardens. I heard my first Tui before I saw it, as it sang, croaked, coughed, wheezed and grunted mid-canopy above a viewing deck in Mirror Lakes in Fiordland NP, New Zealand’s largest national park.
Tui from Queenstown Hill and Mirror Lakes.
13. Bellbird Korimako. The most widespread and familiar honeyeater in the South Island and also common over much of the North Island. A medium-sized nectar feeder with yellowish-green plumage, blackish wings and tail, and red eyes. This bird regaled me with its songs from up in the canopy of native forests in Aoraki, Te Anau and Glenorchy.
Korimako from Mirror Lakes foraging for nectar,
and from Milford Sound looking smug after feeding on an insect.
14. Tomtit Miromiro/ Ngirungiru. The tomtit is a small forest bird with distinct large head and short tail. Males are generally black and white, females brown and white. Both sexes have a white spot at the base of the bill. Usually feeds in understory of forest but will come out in the open.
Miromiro/ Ngirungiru in typical pose, perched on a branch ready to swoop down to take insect prey.
15. South Island Robin Kakaruai. A small charcoal-colored songbird confined to South Island and Stewart Island. Found in back-country native forest and scrub habitats, where it spends much time foraging on the ground. Males have a more distinct separation between dark gray and cream on their chest than females. A pair of robins welcomed this intrepid vagabond at the washed-out trailhead of the Milford Track on the Eglinton River.
South Island endemic Kakaruai from Mirror Lakes.
16. New Zealand Fantail Piwakawaka. One of New Zealand’s best-known small endemic songbirds. Widespread throughout New Zealand in a variety of habitats. Uniquely characterized by a long white and black tail which it constantly flicks around and fans, and which is often the first thing visible. There are two colour ‘morphs’ of fantail, with the more common pied morph occurring throughout its range, and the black morph comprising up to 5% of the South Island population and occasionally occurring in the North Island.
Piwakawaka from Mirror Lakes and Te Anau (black morph below) .
17. New Zealand Pipit Pihoihoi. Species found in open country from coastline to alpine shrublands at ca 1900m. Prominent pale eyebrow with brown streaked upper body, pale underparts and brown streaking on breast. Often seen walking rather than hopping or flying and frequently flicking its long tail up and down when stationary. When approached Pipits often run a short distance from people.