Encounter with a special robin
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ELISABETH M. BROWN
The native Maori name for New Zealand is Aotearoa, or Island of the
Long White (rain) Cloud. Indeed, its native forests are dark and wet.
Mosses, ferns and liverworts crowd the forest floor, tree ferns and
unfamiliar Southern Beech trees tower above. It’s temperate rain
forest, like the Olympic Peninsula in Washington, but with different
plants.
The country is the size of Great Britain, its two main islands
isolated in the southern Pacific after having split from Australia 70
million years ago. Like Hawaii, its isolation has greatly influenced
the selection of animals and plants that grow there.
Native New Zealand ecosystems are dominated by birds. Besides one
bat, three reptiles, and a few frogs, there were no vertebrates
(animals with backbones) other than birds before the Polynesians
arrived.
Walking on a quiet forest trail near Lake Taupo in the North
Island, I began to hear chirps. Suddenly a small grayish bird
appeared very close by on a tree branch, so close I didn’t need my
binoculars.
I froze, not wanting to alarm it, thinking it would fly off any
second. But that didn’t happen. Instead, it fixed me with a bold
stare. I stared back for a long minute, unmoving, although I was
dying to take out the camera. Then it chirped and flew in front of me
to another small tree next to the path, but on the other side. I
turned slowly to be able to watch it. Again it seemed to want only to
stare.
Another minute passed, giving me the chance to memorize the
features of my feathery companion. It was smallish (about 7 inches),
overall grey-brown, with light colored breast, dark glittery eyes and
a narrow pointed beak. In other words, a New Zealand robin.
Finally, with a louder chirp, it launched itself into the air and
flew right by my head, so close I could feel the wind from its wings
as it fluttered past. This time I got the message: “Get out of my
territory. Move on.”
Small and grey, this bird is very unlike our familiar red-breasted
robin. Its feisty attitude is also very unusual for one of our birds.
I suspect this is not a very good technique for a small bird faced
with a feral house cat or a fox. But it works on other birds, and
that’s the key.
According to the New Zealand bird book, other small songbirds
defend their territories in the same way, zigzagging around an
intruder while chirping loudly. It’s a form of mobbing behavior --
when smaller birds fly around and harass larger birds to get them to
fly off.
For a long time, the only intruders into New Zealand forests were
other birds. Aggressive behavior made perfect sense when the giant
flightless moas walked into the forest and blundered into a robin’s
territory. The smaller birds warned them off. Maybe to this little
robin, I was just another moa.
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