Real photograph Kakapo
Strigops habroptilus
say it KAH-kah-poh
Why we love them
The kakapo is a large, round, mossy-green parrot that lives only in New Zealand. Its soft feathers are blotched with green and yellow, and it has a round face a bit like an owl, with whiskery feathers around its beak. It is a very unusual bird, and one of the most special parrots in the world.
What makes the kakapo so different is that it cannot fly at all. It is the only parrot on Earth that has given up flying. Instead it walks along the forest floor on its strong legs, and it is a wonderful climber, using its beak and feet to clamber high into the trees. It is also the heaviest of all parrots.
Kakapo are night birds. They sleep tucked away during the day and come out after dark to find food. They are plant-eaters, nibbling leaves, shoots, seeds, and fruit. Their favourite treat is the fruit of the rimu tree, and in years when there is lots of it, they feast on almost nothing else.
Kakapo are also famous for the sound the males make. When it is time to find a mate, a male puffs himself up like a feathery balloon and makes a deep, booming call that can travel a long way through the night. Kakapo can live for a very long time, sometimes for many, many years.
Sadly, the kakapo is one of the rarest birds in the world. Long ago there were lots of them, but animals like cats, rats, and stoats that were brought to New Zealand made their numbers drop. Today only around 250 kakapo are left, and they live safely on special islands with no hungry predators. A team of scientists watches over every bird, gives each one a name, and helps them raise their chicks, so that this remarkable parrot has a chance to grow in number again.
My home
Forest, scrubland
Where I live
Oceania
What I eat
Rimu fruit, seeds, leaves, shoots, rhizomes, tubers, moss, fungi
How long I am
0.64 m
How heavy I am
0.95–3 kg
How long I live
40–90 years
The kakapo is the only parrot in the whole world that cannot fly, and it is also the heaviest, with big males weighing up to about three kilograms.
Kakapo come out at night and are plant-eaters, and they especially love munching the fruit of a New Zealand tree called the rimu.
Kakapo are one of the rarest birds on Earth, with only around 250 left, and every single one has its own name and is carefully looked after by conservation workers.
Every kakapo can feel happy, scared and loved — just like you.
Looking after my friends
Needs lots of helpVery few are left in the wild — and many kind people are working hard to save them.
You can help by learning their names, keeping wild places clean, and telling someone why this animal matters.
Where this came from
- Strigops habroptilus (Kakapo) — Red List Assessment — IUCN Red List of Threatened Species
- Strigops habroptilus (kakapo) — Animal Diversity Web, University of Michigan Museum of Zoology
- Kākāpō — Wikipedia (Wikimedia Foundation)