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1:25 Manu Minute with Patrick Hart, March 31st, 2021. To learn more about Dr. Hart s work, go to lohelab.org. Similar to nuthatches, these little birds forage for insects and spiders along the trunks of trees. They favor ohi‘a and will climb and hang upside down in order to get at a particularly juicy bug. As temperatures continue to warm, disease-carrying mosquitoes are invading the last high elevation strongholds for ˊakikiki in the Alakaˊi plateau of Kauaˊi. Fewer than 500 ˊakikiki remain. The Kauaˊi Forest Bird Recovery Project, along with the Keauhou Bird Conservation Center (KBCC) and Maui Bird Conservation Center (MBCC), are working together to create a breeding population in captivity. ....
1:26 Manu Minute with Patrick Hart, March 10th, 2021. Today s Manu Minute was made with recordings from the Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology (ML32588). To learn more about Dr. Hart s work, visit lohelab.org. So how does a bird that s barely the size of an apple banana from the opposite side of the world make it to Hawai i? Oh, the usual way. Because of their cheerful song and pleasant appearance, yellow-fronted canaries was first brought to the islands as a cagebird. Then one was released, potentially on accident, from an aviary near Koko Crater on Oahu in the 1960s. Around the same time, they were also released, probably on purpose, on Pu u Wa awa a Ranch on the west side of Hawai i island. They ve since become a permanent feature on those two islands, and have also been sighted on Molokai and Maui. ....
1:25 Manu Minute with Patrick Hart, February 24th, 2021. To learn more about Dr. Hart s work, visit lohelab.org Ae o were once much more common in Hawaii, but loss of wetland habitat and introduction of mammalian predators has reduced their population to less than 1500 birds. Hawaiian stilts build their nests on the ground near shallow wetlands. Ae o are known to aggressively defend their nests by dive-bombing and loudly scolding any intruder, including humans, that comes near. Ae o are considered to be the kinolau, or physical manifestation, of the Hawaiian god Kū in his fisherman form. Want to listen or read more about the birds of Hawai i? Check out our Manu Minute page. ....