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Rainbow Spring Nature Park

KIWI ENCOUNTER
Ph + 64 7 350 0440
Freephone 0800 724 626
info@kiwiencounter.co.nz

Fairy Springs Road
PO Box 25 Rotorua
New Zealand

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About the Kiwi

Kiwi fascinate scientists because although it is a bird it has features more characteristic of a mammal.

  • It has tiny wings, but cannot fly
  • It has feathers that are more like fur
  • It is the only bird in the world with nostrils at the end of its beak
  • Its sense of smell is second to none
  • It has no tail feathers, but does have whiskers, like a cat
  • It has marrow in its bones, just like a human
  • Very unusually, females have two ovaries, most birds have only one
Kiwi Feet (photo courtesy of Emma Bean)

Kiwi - a creature of the night

Most kiwi will sleep away the day time in a burrow. They are nocturnal which means they come out after nightfall when they come out to forage for food under the protection of the night.

This is when they will find a huge array of food - insects, grubs, earthworms, fallen fruit and native plants.

Other night birds are equipped with big powerful eyes so that they can see at night. The kiwi is different, its small eyes do not see as well at night.

Instead it feels and smells and hears its way around. Its big ear openings provide a very good sense of hearing and the long graceful whiskers and sensitive bill help it locate food in the soil and leaf litter.

Far from being a shy night creature, kiwi are bold and territorial. Superbly adapted for life in the forest.

Kiwi foraging for food

In the forest you can hear it before you can see it

The kiwi is often given away by the sound of its uniquely placed 'noisy' nostrils at the tip of its bill. As it walks it taps the ground with its bill, probing the soil and sniffing loudly.

It has a well developed sense of smell because the part of the brain controlling this sense is much larger than in other birds and is more like a mammal's structure.

Perfect camouflage

Kiwi feathers are different to those of most birds. From a distance they look more like fur, although when stroked you can feel the feather structure. The feathers hang loose, they keep the rain out and the warmth in. Unlike other birds the feathers molt throughout the year and are constantly being renewed.

The feather patterns allow kiwi to disappear into the dark and fade into the forest vegetation. When distressed a kiwi freezes, disguising itself from aerial predators.

 

Kiwi Ear Opening (photo courtesy of Emma Bean)
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