
For teachers - a resource at levels 2 through 5 of the New Zealand Curriculum.

The areas were chosen to include significant populations of the most endangered kiwi – rowi and Haast tokoeka – and sample populations of brown kiwi, the species suffering the greatest rate of decline. The sanctuaries are in:
Outside kiwi sanctuaries and other managed areas, most mainland kiwi populations are declining and the size of the area they live in is shrinking. For example, unmanaged brown kiwi populations are predicted to halve every 25 years and, if cost-effective techniques to control predators over large areas are not found, they are in danger of disappearing from the much of the mainland within a human lifetime (75 years).
Each sanctuary aims to increase the number of young kiwi surviving each year so that they more than balance adult deaths.
The sanctuaries also provide the Department with opportunities for research and monitoring. These include:
In the three North Island kiwi sanctuaries, progress has been huge. Kiwi numbers have increased rapidly and populations are expected to at least double by 2015.
Breeding success in the two South Island kiwi sanctuaries has been lower, despite extensive stoat trapping, and so it is clear these populations are more complex to manage. The recent use of BNZ Operation Nest Egg™ has led to populations starting to grow again, and they are expected to double before 2020.
The results show that a single management approach is not the answer for kiwi conservation – methods need to be tailored to each area, depending on the mix of predators at each site, and the biology of each kiwi taxon.
In 1906, the Smithsonian National Zoological Park, in Washington D.C., was the first North American zoo to exhibit kiwi. Brown kiwi have been on permanent display since 1968 – the first pair was a gift from the New Zealand government.