Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

A PLACE FOR BIRD LOVERS

The pledge: 44 1 promise to care for all wild birds, especially New Zealand native birds, to feed them in winter, and to protect them at all times. I promise also to protect our native trees and bush, and at no time to assist in their damage or destruction, since they are the natural home of our native birds.” Name Full postal address If you wish to join the Bird Club it is necessary to send Is in stamps or a postal note, and a badge and bird book will be sent to you. Address your letters to Big Brother Bill, care of ‘ Evening Star,’ Stuart street, Dunedin, 0.1. Be sure to mark your envelopes “ Bird Club.” THE NORTH ISLAND OR WHITEBREASTED TOMTIT. fPetroica toitoi. Native name, , Miromiro.) A black beady eye, a jet black glossy head and upper surface, a white splash on the wings and tail, a white spot above the bill, a white waistcoat a boldness akin to impudence, a constant “ where is that grub?” attitude—such is the cock North Island tomtit. Where the male is black the female is grey; her breast is greyish white. Also, she is of a much more retiring dispositon. The cock bird has a cheery warble of eight notes repeated with little variation at frequent intervals. The hen

sings infrequently, and then always in a subdued manner. Both have a penetrating call note, “ see,” repeated three or four times to keep the pair in touch when hunting for food. The idea of territory.is strongly developed in the tomtit, so'much so thata pair of birds seem to spend all their lives in the same area, and strongly resent the intrusion of another ,of the species. Although 40 years- ago the whitebreasted tit had become very rare, it is now common, not only on the island sanctuaries, but also in widely-separated areas in the North Island. In some places it is the commonest native bird. The clearings still scattered with charred stumps and the bush-clad foothills are favourite summer haunts; in winter, in orchards and gardens, it achieves complete independence of native vegetation. Towards the end of August the birds prepare to nest. A hole in a tree is a favourite site, or a mossy recess in a bank or amongst rocks. Sometimes it is found on a shelf on a large bole, at others in the smaller branches of a low tree. Grass, moss, leaf skeletons, spider web, downy seeds, tree fern scales, and a lining of feathers go to make the cosiest nest in the bush. At this time the sexes arc particularly devoted to each other._ The female does all the construction work, using material brought by the cock, who, in between times, feeds his mate on the choicest of grubs. She is _ a jealous guardian of the nest and its contents, even feigning lameness or a broken wing to lure the stranger away. Up to four eggs are laid, creamy white and freckled all over with brown specks, thickest near the larger end Incubation seems to be the prerogative of the female, who leaves the nest to be fed when called by the male. When the young are hatched both par-

ents catch food for them. It is then that, they frequent paths and clearings in the bush. Occasionally insects are caught on the wing, others arc searched for under the bark of trees; but most of the food consists of larvse taken on the ground. The usual attitude is with the wings slightly droop,eel, the tail erect. Resting for a moment on a branch or tree trunk, a rapid dart is then made to the ground to pick up a grub. Almost without stopping a return is made to the original look-out-station, or perhaps to another deemed more favourable. When walking through the bush we can help the tomtits in their hunt by occasionally dragging a foot to disturb the leaves and expose insects. In the open a fence line provides a perch from which to hunt insects in the grass. In the garden us© is often made of a spade or rake as a perch to spy out insects on the freshly-cultivated ground. The eyesight is remarkable —grubs or other insects may be seen as much as 40ft away. This keen eyesight was known to the Maori. “Ma te kanohi miromiro ” (for the eye of a tomtit) was said as a stimulus to a person seeking a lost article. After leaving the nest the young tomtits are assisted by the parents in catching their food. Then the hen begins to build again, leaving the cook bird to supervise the first family until they can look after themselves.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19370313.2.33.6

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 22596, 13 March 1937, Page 8

Word Count
785

A PLACE FOR BIRD LOVERS Evening Star, Issue 22596, 13 March 1937, Page 8

A PLACE FOR BIRD LOVERS Evening Star, Issue 22596, 13 March 1937, Page 8