← All animals
bird
A tūī singing on a flax stalk, its feathers shining blue-green and two little tufts of white feathers puffing out at its throat. Real photograph
Real photograph Charles J. Sharp, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0

Tūī

Prosthemadera novaeseelandiae

say it TOO-ee

Why we love them

The tūī is a beautiful songbird found only in New Zealand. From a distance it can look plain and dark, but in the sunshine its feathers shimmer with green, blue and bronze. Its most famous feature is the little curly tuft of white feathers at its throat, which bobs about as the bird sings and looks a bit like a tiny bow tie.

Tūī belong to a group of birds called honeyeaters, and their favourite food is nectar, the sweet juice deep inside flowers. They twist and dangle to reach into blossoms of native plants such as flax and kōwhai, and while they sip they carry pollen from flower to flower. This makes the tūī a very important pollinator, helping New Zealand’s plants make new seeds. They also enjoy fruit and insects.

One of the most delightful things about tūī is how they sing. They are wonderful mimics who can copy the calls of other birds like the bellbird, and they will even imitate everyday sounds such as phone ringtones. Long ago, Māori sometimes trained tūī to repeat spoken words, just like a clever talking pet.

Here is a funny fact: the nectar inside flax flowers can sometimes ferment. When a tūī drinks a lot of it, the bird may fly about in a wobbly, tipsy-looking way before shaking it off. It is one of the many things that make watching tūī such a joy.

Happily, the tūī is not threatened, and it can be found across the North, South and Stewart Islands. Where people look after native forest and keep introduced predators under control, tūī can become common again, filling the trees with their bubbling, clicking, musical song.

My home

Broadleaf forest, native forest, gardens

Where I live

Oceania

What I eat

Nectar, fruit, insects, pollen, seeds

How heavy I am

0.058–0.15 kg

The tūī has a curly tuft of white throat feathers and belongs to the honeyeater family, feeding mainly on nectar; it is an important pollinator of native plants like flax and kōwhai.

Tūī are wonderful mimics — they can copy other birds such as the bellbird and even sounds like phone ringtones, and long ago Māori trained them to repeat words.

The nectar of flax flowers can sometimes ferment, and a tūī that drinks it may fly in a wobbly, tipsy-looking way.

Every tūī can feel happy, scared and loved — just like you.

Looking after my friends

Doing well

There are lots of these animals in the wild right now. That is good news!

You can help by learning their names, keeping wild places clean, and telling someone why this animal matters.

Official status: least concern (IUCN)

Where this came from

  • Prosthemadera novaeseelandiae (Tui) — Red List Assessment — IUCN Red List of Threatened Species / BirdLife International (Red List Authority for birds)
  • Tui — New Zealand native land birds — New Zealand Department of Conservation (Te Papa Atawhai)
  • Tūī — Wikipedia