Birds of Te Araroa 1 – Cape Reinga to Kaitāia

Birds of Te Araroa 1 – Cape Reinga to Kaitāia

Between November 2023 and March 2024, Natural History curator Colin Miskelly is walking the length of Aotearoa New Zealand on Te Araroa Trail – counting every bird seen or heard along the way. In this second blog in the series, Colin starts out on his journey.

The first bird

New Zealand has a greater diversity of seabirds than any other nation. Te Araroa Trail starts and finishes at two prominent headlands, and so it was appropriate that the first bird of the trail be a seabird.

After the obligatory pose and photoshoot by the Cape Reinga signpost, I turned my gaze northwards to the distant Manawatāwhi Three Kings Islands. Using binoculars, I scanned the meeting place of Te Tai-o-Rēhua (Tasman Sea) and Moana-nui-a-Kiwa (Pacific Ocean) and soon picked out small flocks of fluttering shearwaters│pakahā heading east, with one larger Buller’s shearwater│rako among them, and three Australasian gannets│tākapu flying west.

A white-fronted bird flying low over the sea.
Fluttering shearwater. Photo by Neil Fitzgerald. New Zealand Birds Online

With the first New Zealand Bird Atlas Scheme checklist started in my notebook, we turned southwards and began our peripatetic perambulation to Bluff – which we hope to reach in early March.

A view from up high looking down on a coast that reaches far into the distance.
Te Oneroa-a-Tōhē | Ninety Mile Beach. Photo by Colin Miskelly

Ninety Mile Beach Patrol

The first section of  Te Araroa Trail is dominated by the vast sandy length of Te Oneroa-a-Tōhē Ninety Mile Beach. The English name is hyperbolic – its actual length is closer to 90 kilometres – but it is still a daunting distance to walk with a pack crammed with everything you need to survive.

A man wearing shorts and a large pack is walking away from the camera on a long sandy beach on a sunny day.
Only 3000 km to go. Colin Miskelly at the northern end of Te Oneroa-a-Tōhē | Ninety Mile Beach. Photo by Gordon Miskelly

Te Araroa Trail notes suggest that the Ninety Mile Beach section is 85 km of firm sand, best walked near the water’s edge. But the notes were not intended for birders, who know that there is more to find and interpret on the stormline – a treasure-filled zone of loose, dry sand that meanders around the head of each embayment.

My GPS breadcrumb trail shows that I walked 98 km of soft sand on Te Oneroa-a-Tōhē. Actually, my wristwatch GPS is not that clever – my leg muscles added the extra detail.

I learnt how to identify dead seabirds as a teenager on the long sandy beaches north of Auckland – Muriwai on the west coast and Pakiri on the east coast. The information on birds cast on shore is submitted to the Beach Patrol Scheme managed by Birds New Zealand.

This scheme has been running for more than 80 years and is thought to be New Zealand’s longest-running citizen science project. The same ID skills are useful in my job as a curator at Te Papa, as I often identify fragrant fragments sent in by Birds New Zealand members or the general public.

A dead white and brown bird lying face-up on the sand. There is an inset photo in the top left showing the beak and chin of the same bird.
Dead fluttering shearwater, Ninety Mile Beach. This looks very like a Hutton’s shearwater, but it isn’t. It differs in having a paler underwing, shorter bill, and splayed mandibular rami (see inset). Photos by Colin Miskelly
A dead white and brown bird lying face-up on the sand. There is an inset photo in the top left showing the beak and chin of the same bird.
Dead Hutton’s shearwater, Ninety Mile Beach. This looks very like a fluttering shearwater, but it isn’t. It differs in having a darker underwing, longer bill, and adpressed mandibular rami (see inset). Photos by Colin Miskelly

We found corpses or remains of 122 seabirds of 18 species during our walk (three full days and part of two others).

The most notable find was a long-deceased white-chinned petrel | karetai kauae mā. This large burrow-nesting petrel is characteristic of the subantarctic zone, and I have encountered them on their breeding grounds on the Auckland Islands, Antipodes Island, and Kerguelen Islands, as well as large numbers near South Georgia.

About five are identified on New Zealand coasts each year, and it was only the second I have found in 48 years of beach patrolling.

Dead and decaying bird bones in the sand with an orange trowel trowel stabbed into the sand.
Long-deceased white-chinned petrel, identifiable by its large size, dark plumage, and robust, straw-coloured beak that lacks a dark tip. Note strategic use and placement of Te Araroa Faecal Deposit Device. Photo by Colin Miskelly

An uncommon visitor

The most unexpected live bird of the first section of the trail was a common tern. Which isn’t common. In fact, it is such a rare bird in New Zealand that it is a Reportable Species.

Common terns are common in Europe, which is where they get their common name. Between one and five common terns are detected in New Zealand each year, often roosting with their almost identical white-fronted tern│tara cousins. The one that we found near Hukatere, Ninety Mile Beach, was among a flock of 304 white-fronted terns.

A white bird with black feathers on the top of its head and a black beak is standing on sand facing the right side of the photo.
Common tern. This is not the bird that Colin saw, but looks very similar. It also looks similar to a non-breeding white-fronted tern, which it isn’t. Photo by Alan Tennyson. New Zealand Birds Online

I took detailed notes of the bird’s plumage and sketched its head pattern, so that I can prepare an Unusual Bird Report to submit to the Birds New Zealand Records Appraisal Committee.

A drawing of a bird head with dark areas on its head and around its eye. It is in the middle of a lined notebook and surrounded by handwriting.
Head sketch of common tern in Colin’s notes. Photo by Colin Miskelly
A part of a map of the North Island of New Zealand with five green arrows pointing at different places on the map where the author has walked. The arrows have the words "Sign here" on them, although that isn't related to the reason they are there.
The first section of Te Araroa Trail, showing sites where Colin provided digital sign of his presence. Photo by Kate McAlpine

Native species seen live on section one

Paradise shelduck│pūtangitangi, pūkeko, variable oystercatcher│tōrea pango, South Island pied oystercatcher│tōrea, New Zealand dotterel│tūturiwhatu, banded dotterel│pohowera, spur-winged plover, red-billed gull│tarāpunga, southern black-backed gull│karoro, Caspian tern│taranui, white-fronted tern│tara, common tern, Buller’s shearwater│rako, flesh-footed shearwater│toanui, fluttering shearwater│pakahā, Australasian gannet│tākapu, pied shag│kāruhiruhi, white-faced heron│matuku moana, swamp harrier│kāhu, sacred kingfisher│kōtare, tūī, grey warbler│riroriro, New Zealand fantail│pīwakawaka, welcome swallow│warou, silvereye│tauhou, New Zealand pipit│pihoihoi.

A small white bird with light brown back feathers, darker brown chest feathers, and a black stripe around the front of its neck and a black beak. It is standing on pebbles.
Male banded dotterel. An increasingly rare species in the Far North. Photo by Neil Fitzgerald. New Zealand Birds Online

Summary statistics for section one

  • Days on the trail = 5
  • Kilometres travelled and surveyed = 127.3
  • eBird/Atlas checklists = 66
  • Number of bird species = 41
  • Total live birds seen or heard = 2,698
  • Most abundant species = white-fronted tern (721)
  • Most frequent species = southern black backed gull (83.3% of checklists)
  • Endemic bird score = 27
Te Araroa Trail does not only traverse the coastline and back country. Colin Miskelly walking alongside the road between Ahipara and Kaitāia. Photo by Zilla van Aartrijk

Who gives a hoot?

This blog series is primarily about the birds that can be seen or heard from Te Araroa Trail. However, I have arranged a few off-piste birding adventures as I progress southward. These will be featured in the blogs, but not in the summary statistics.

A slightly blurry image of a white and grey owl looking at the camera. It is sitting in a tree at night.
Barn owl, Kaitāia. Photo by Scott Brooks. New Zealand Birds Online

Before leaving Wellington, I contacted a Kaitāia-based birder to take us looking for one of New Zealand’s least-known bird species. Barn owls are assumed to have colonised New Zealand naturally from Australia about two decades ago. Kevin monitors a small population near Kaitāia.

We headed out at dusk, and were surprised at how many owls we could hear (both barn owl and ruru). We had a couple of brief views of barn owls in flight, and it was great to learn their calls before continuing our hikoi to places we may hear them.

Other blogs in this series

Related blogs

7 Comments

  1. Loved the beach survey photos and details…. and will be taking a longer look at gatherings of white-fronted terns from now on!!

  2. Hi Colin Wonderful weather! So cool to see the terns. All the best for the rest of your journey.

  3. Fascinating. I had no idea about the barn owls, but how great to have another ratcatcher on the national team.

  4. Great start to the journey Colin. A decent beach patrol as well. Glad a seabird started the list off.

  5. Super impressive and fascinating work.

  6. Great start Colin! Very envious. A great way to help people connect with Aotearoa’s wildlife!

    Go well.

  7. Congratulations on a great beginning to your project and hike! I haven’t been to NZ for years, but loved your birds, and was fascinated to learn that “New Zealand has a greater diversity of seabirds than any other nation.” I’ll share that fact with my team conducting the Puget Sound Seabird Survey here on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington state, USA. I look forward to following your journey through your blogs. Thank you!

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