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National
Georgia Merton

Kaikōura’s seabirds clobbered by climate change

Kaikōura is home to over 150 species of seabird. Along with the Hauraki Gulf it is the seabird capital of the world. But changing sea temperatures are causing many of them to starve.

Sabrina Leucht is a marine biologist but locals now know her as the “Bird Lady”. Leucht has been voluntarily treating and rehabilitating sick and injured seabirds (or patients, as she calls them) from her home in Kaikōura for the past five years.

“What really draws the seabirds here is the Kaikōura canyon, which is a deepwater canyon only 800 metres from shore, so we’ve got a huge food source,” Sabrina explains. “In the summer we literally have people calling me saying the beach is just littered in seabirds. This is distressing for people and they don’t understand why this is.”

Leucht says the main reason she has had so many birds in care is starvation. “New Zealand birds are in trouble, 90 percent of all seabirds are threatened and nearly all of that is due to human-related threats,” she says. “Climate change is causing an increase in sea surface temperature, and that’s suppressing prey species such as krill and fish to cooler depths,” Sabrina says, and explains that seabirds can’t reach these new depths, going hungry instead.

Even red billed gulls, known around some fish and chip shops as ‘rats of the sky’, are in trouble. “[The gull], which is perceived to be really common, is now a threatened species. Kaikōura is really unique in having the largest remaining mainland colony, and also the fastest declining colony,” Leucht says. “A lot of the chicks never make it to adulthood.”

For Sabrina and the Kaikōura community, finding dead shags, penguins, gulls and shearwaters across the beaches has become a common sight. “During the summer period you often find starving shags, and these young shags will actually walk up to people in their backyards and building sites in desperation for food.”

There’s pressure on Leucht as well as the bird populations. Five years of doing this work solo has taken its toll, and she’s shifting her focus to a bigger vision the community can get behind: a dedicated wildlife facility, the plans for which are starting to take shape. “I physically couldn't maintain that sort of a voluntary workload, helping that many patients non-stop every year,” she says.

Under the title of the Kaikōura Wildlife Trust, Leucht has plans for a wildlife hospital that will tend to sick seabirds (and other wildlife) as well as educating the public on their plight. “It will be a multi-faceted centre where patients are triaged behind the scenes,” she says. “We’ll then have pre-release aviaries as well as an education centre, and a chick-rearing unit.”

Fundraising is underway for the centre, and whilst Leucht will still likely be known around town as the Bird Lady, there’ll be more hands on deck to help with the cause. “This will probably be my life’s work,” she says. “If the will is there and enough people have the passion to make it happen, it will happen.”

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