20 Mar 2018

Takahē moved to new Nelson home

2:52 pm on 20 March 2018

Up to 18 takahē are being moved today to a new home in the Kahurangi National Park.

A young wild takahē in Fiordland's Takahē Valley.

A young wild takahē in Fiordland's Takahē Valley. Photo: RNZ / Alison Ballance

The Department of Conservation says the native birds are being flown on a special charter flight from Queenstown to Nelson, and then by helicopter for release into the park in northwest Nelson.

A DoC spokesperson said the takahē came from a wild population in the Murchison Mountains in Southland - where the species was rediscovered 70 years ago.

Plans to shift the birds last winter were delayed by bad weather and the birds' breeding season.

DoC said today's release was a significant step for the recovery of takahē, which now number more than 300, with the population growing at 10 percent a year.

It has moved two steps further away from extinction in the species threats classification.

The South Island takahē is a relic of the flightless, plant-eating bird that once ranged abundantly throughout New Zealand.

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