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Spying on a Tui Nest
by Geoff Moon
(wildlife photographer) Extract from Focus
on New Zealand Birds
The first tui
nest I photographed was about 6m above ground in a tall
manuka. I built a hide in easy stages 2m away.
I started observation
on the 14th day of incubation, when two of the three
eggs had hatched. The female tui returned to the
nest immediately taking not the least notice of the hide or camera lens,
and at once settled to brood while her mate started
singing a short distance away. Within 10 minutes
she quietly left the nest but returned in 2 minutes
and fed the tiny chicks, her tongue moving in and out
very rapidly during the process. She then cleaned
the interior of the nest and settled to brood again.
During the day
she fed the young on an average of once every 12 minutes
and was never away from the nest for longer than 2 minutes
on each occasion. Once, the male bird called her
from the nest and she joined him on a tree 12m away,
where he fed her. She quickly returned and fed
the chicks, afterwards cleaning the nest and eating
the excreta.
Later in the
day the third egg hatched. She gently removed
the half eggshell, dropped it 20m away, and returned
to the brood. It was more than 20 minutes later
before she removed the remainder of the eggshell.
During the first
four days the male tui did not actually visit the nest.
But as the young developed, the female tui was
often absent for periods of up to 12 minutes, and then
the male bird sometimes came to feed the chicks. He
always appeared to be in a hurry and he made no attempt
to clean the nest or dispose of excreta.
This particular
brood unfortunately met with disaster. The female
tui was brooding the chicks, now five days old, when
a family of magpies began noisily working their way
in the direction of the nest, uttering their usual whistling
calls. The brooding tui became very alert, stood
up, and then left the nest when the magpies were about
20m away and flew to a tree some distance behind the
hide, where she crouched motionless and silent. This
behaviour surprised me in view of the tui's usual pugnacious
nature.
One magpie spotted
the nest and alighted on a branch above it, gazing down
at the chicks, but I frightened it away as it was about
to fly down to the nest, and the female tui returned
and brooded as soon as the coast was clear. However,
within half an hour three magpies returned to the scene
and the whole performance was repeated, the tui again
retreating in silence. This time I left the hide
and thoroughly scared away the marauders, who did not
return again that day. When I left the hide that
evening I concealed the nest with extra branches of
manuka, but when I returned next day the nest was empty.
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