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Kaki - black stilt - Himantopus novaezelandiae

Photographed on the shores of Lake McGregor, Canterbury, New Zealand.

The world's rarest wading bird. Once the common stilt of New Zealand, the black stilt is now critically endangered with a breeding population confined to the Mackenzie Basin of South Canterbury and North Otago. Adults are distinctive in having entirely black plumage, long red legs and a thin black bill, but juveniles and subadults can easily be overlooked amongst pied stilts, while hybrids add to the plumage confusion. Black stilts frequent the wide open braided rivers and associated wetlands of the Mackenzie Basin. There they favour shallow waters of invertebrate-rich sidestreams and pools, wading out into deep water if necessary. Some birds migrate to northern New Zealand harbours - www.nzbirdsonline.org.nz

 

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Uploaded on November 13, 2019
Taken on October 6, 2019