Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 2
Trixie and Nacho Produce 55 Chicks, Lifting Kākāriki Karaka Population by More Than 10%
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 2

Trixie and Nacho Produce 55 Chicks, Lifting Kākāriki Karaka Population by More Than 10%

6 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 2
  • Fifty-five chicks from Trixie and Nacho in two years have boosted the critically endangered kākāriki karaka population by more than 10%, with 33 hatching in the latest December-to-April breeding season.
  • About 450 orange-fronted parakeets remain in the wild and captivity, making the pair’s output unusually important as New Zealand tries to stop the species from disappearing again.
  • Isaac Conservation and Wildlife Trust in Christchurch paired the birds in 2024 after letting compatible parakeets choose mates; other breeding pairs typically produce only 10 to 15 chicks.
  • The species was declared extinct in 1919 and again in 1965 before being rediscovered both times, and conservationists are now relying on predator-free sanctuaries and captive breeding to avoid a third loss.
With 55 new chicks from one pair, where will New Zealand's rarest parakeet live next?
Can two 'super parrots' truly save their species, or are they creating a new genetic crisis?