Signup for our newsletter
BNZ Save the Kiwi Facebook group BNZ Save the Kiwi YouTube channel Rowi Project Twitter Feed Site RSS Feeds
Kiwi Practitioners
Login

Kiwi Calls

Print
Kiwi Calling and Listening
This page has been created to display multi-media content. In order to view it you will need to download and install the free Adobe® Flash® Player plugin. When you have installed the plugin, return to this page and view the full article.
Flash Player
One of the simplest ways to locate kiwi is to listen. 

Kiwi call at night to mark their territory and stay in touch with their mate. The best time to listen is on a moonless night, up to two hours after dark, and just before dawn. That’s when kiwi stir from their burrows and call to make contact with their partner or family, and to mark their territory.

Deciphering sounds in the night forest can sometimes be confusing. Click on the icons above to hear the distinctive calls of a range of kiwi and the nocturnal animals sometimes confused for a kiwi.

What to Listen For

The call of the male kiwi is repetitive and shrill and has 8-25 notes.
The call of the female is a repetitive guttural sound of 10-20 notes.

Telling the difference

Kiwi calls can easily be confused with other nocturnal animals. Some of the more common mistakes are made with:

  • long-tail cuckoo
  • weka
  • morepork/ruru
  • possums

Click on the thumbnail in the audio player above to hear each animals' call.

Kiwi call scheme

A kiwi call scheme run by the Department of Conservation collects information from people who can reliably identify kiwi calls and are prepared to carry out timed counts. Over the years, the scheme has provided a great baseline of information

DonateBanner
Find out more
Call Count Monitoring
Call Count Monitoring Hear what a kiwi call sounds like, and learn how to monitor kiwi.
Find out more
Training Competition
Training Competition Have your hunting dog avoidance trained and you could win a hunting trip to the Motu!
Find out more
Community Efforts
Community Efforts Community groups are vital for kiwi survival. Find out what people are doing, and how you can get involved.
Did You Know?

Stealthy stoats are kiwi chicks’ worst predator.  In the wild, only 10% of young birds survive to six months, and fewer than 5% grow to adulthood.

Kiwi Call - Flash player needed