
Kākāpō - Wikipedia
It is the world's only flightless parrot, the world's heaviest parrot, and also is nocturnal, herbivorous, visibly sexually dimorphic in body size, has a low basal metabolic rate, and does not have male parental care. It is the only parrot to have a polygynous lek breeding system.
Kākāpō: New Zealand native land birds - Department of …
The kākāpō is a nocturnal, flightless parrot. And its strangeness doesn't end there. It's critically endangered and one of New Zealand’s unique treasures. There are fewer than 250 kākāpō alive today. 02:14 – Adult male 'booming' to attract females. 00:22 …
Kakapo - Facts, Diet, Habitat & Pictures on Animalia.bio
It is the only parrot to have a polygynous lek breeding system. It is also possibly one of the world's longest-living birds, with a reported lifespan of up to 100 years. Like many other New Zealand bird species, the kākāpō was historically important to Māori, the indigenous people of New Zealand.
Kakapo | Endangered, Flightless, Parrot | Britannica
2025年2月26日 · Kakapo, (Strigops habroptilus), giant flightless nocturnal parrot (family Psittacidae) of New Zealand. With a face like an owl, a posture like a penguin, and a walk like a duck, the extraordinarily tame and gentle kakapo is one of strangest and rarest birds on Earth. Heaviest of the world’s
Kākāpō | Kakapo | New Zealand Birds Online
The kākāpō is a large, nocturnal, flightless, lek-breeding parrot – a real oddity. It is also critically endangered, and the focus of considerable conservation attention.
Kākāpō: Bird on the brink - New Zealand Geographic
In a land renowned for its unusual birds, the kākāpō—a giant flightless nocturnal parrot with a bizarre breeding system—has to be one of the strangest. Although it has been lingering perilously close to extinction for the past half century, there is renewed hope that this icon of conservation effort has a future after all.
14 Kakapo Facts - Fact Animal
Also called the owl parrot, this is a species of large, nocturnal, flightless and ground-dwelling parrot. The kakapo is the world’s only flightless parrot and one of the longest-living birds. It’s native to New Zealand, living in island forests.
kākāpō - Re:wild
Kākāpō are among the world’s most ancient bird species, and have inhabited New Zealand for millions of years. After humans arrived and introduced predators to the island, the once-abundant Kākāpō population rapidly declined.
Habitat and islands: Kākāpō - Department of Conservation
There are fewer than 250 kākāpō alive today. Before humans settled here, kākāpō were widespread on mainland New Zealand. Sub-fossil remains and Māori middens (kitchen waste-piles) suggest they lived in a wide range of habitats and were once one of the most common bird species in New Zealand.
Kakapo - eBird
New Zealand’s largest endemic parrot. Flightless, nocturnal, and solitary, confined to several predator-free offshore islands. Adults have a moss-green coloring mottled with black and yellow on top. Shows gray legs, feet, and bill with a unique pale owl-like face. A solitary bird that forages on the ground and climbs trees at night.