Main content

Liz Bonnin presents the formerly widespread saddleback of New Zealand.

Tweet of the Day is the voice of birds and our relationship with them, from around the world.

Liz Bonnin presents the formerly widespread saddleback of New Zealand. It's loud, piping and whistling calls once resounded throughout New Zealand's forests, but now the saddleback is heard only on smaller offshore islands. This is a bird in exile. About the size of a European blackbird, saddlebacks are predominantly black with a rust-coloured saddle-shaped patch on their backs. In Maori culture this mark came from the demi-God Maui who, after trying to catch the sun, asked the saddleback to fetch water. The bird refused, so hot-handed Maui grabbed it and left a scorch mark on the bird's back. As well as this chestnut saddle, the bird has two bright red wattles at the base of its beak which it can dilate when it displays. It also has an extensive vocabulary and one of its calls has earned it the Maori name –"Ti-e-ke".

Producer : Andrew Dawes

Available now

2 minutes

Last on

Thu 19 Oct 202305:58

Saddleback (Philesturnus carunculatus)

Webpage image courtesy of Tui De Roy / naturepl.com.

NPL Ref 01454636 © Tui De Roy / naturepl.com

Broadcasts

  • Wed 17 Dec 201405:58
  • Sun 21 Dec 201408:58
  • Tue 17 Nov 201505:58
  • Fri 7 Jun 201905:58
  • Mon 31 Aug 202005:58
  • Fri 19 Aug 202205:58
  • Thu 19 Oct 202305:58

Podcast: Planet Puffin

Podcast: Planet Puffin

Exploring all things puffin - the silly and the serious, the scientific and the cultural.

Try this new podcast

Try this new podcast

Five stories of birds and birdsong are told by the people inspired by them.

Podcast