28 Sep 2023

Dotterels: The Southland underdog

From Our Changing World, 5:00 am on 28 September 2023

As the tide closes in on Awarua Bay in Southland, a collection of wading birds gathers closer together, pecking away at the last stretches of sandbar and seagrass.  

Grey plovers, knots, bar-tailed godwits, banded dotterels, oystercatchers, and a single Terek sandpiper, nicknamed Derek.  

And among the crowd, a little flock of southern New Zealand dotterels clusters together – at a quick count: 54 birds. Just under half of the total population.  

The hands of a person wearing a bright orange fleece gently hold a small bird with mottled brown and white plumage above and rust-coloured plumage on its breast. The bird has a small device attached to its back and blue and green rings around one of its legs.

A southern New Zealand dotterel is equipped with a tag for tracking where it goes during the summer. Photo: © Oscar Thomas

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Declining numbers 

"Since 2010 the [southern New Zealand] dotterel population has more than halved," says Daniel Cocker, a member of the Department of Conservation (DOC) Southern New Zealand Dotterel recovery team. The annual count in April of this year revealed that the population has dropped to just 126 birds.   

Plump and handsome - especially when sporting their red-chested breeding plumage - these little birds would once have been widely distributed and bred on mountaintops around Southland. Now, they are restricted to breeding on some of the peaks of Rakiura Stewart Island.  

Two people wearing warm clothes are standing with their backs to the camera, looking out into an expanse of mudflat and shallow estuary. One person is wearing a beanie and has a long lens camera. The other person is wearing green and peering through a scope on a tripod. It is a grey overcast sky.

Oscar Thomas and Daniel Cocker look out for southern New Zealand dotterels. Photo: Claire Concannon / RNZ

The breeding site secret 

It's during this breeding phase that they are most vulnerable to predation, and the main culprit is feral cats. Daniel, and the rest of the recovery team based on Rakiura, are focused on predator control in the areas that these birds are known to breed. But they only know the breeding locations for about 20 percent of the birds - most of them go to mountaintops unknown.  

That's why DOC staff and researchers from the University of Otago have teamed up to attach satellite tags to some of the southern New Zealand dotterels in Awarua Bay. When not breeding, the birds flock here, and in a few other bays on Rakiura, feeding up on the bugs in the sand.  

Master's student Oscar Thomas is hoping that by adding these tags to the birds, the team will be able to discover where they go.  

A man and a woman in warm clothes and beanies handle a small bird outside under a grey sky while another woman in warm clothes and a beanie sits in the background taking notes on paper.

Richard and Katie work to fit the transmitter while Dr Jo Monks takes notes. Photo: Claire Concannon / RNZ

Listen to the episode to get to know this Southland underdog, hear the story about how Daniel first got involved in their conservation at age 14 and learn how the satellite tags are fitted to the birds.  

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