Southern Brown Kiwi vs North Island Brown Kiwi
Apteryx australis dibandingkan dengan Apteryx mantelli
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Atribut | Southern Brown Kiwi | North Island Brown Kiwi |
|---|---|---|
| Nama Ilmiah | Apteryx australis | Apteryx mantelli |
| Ordo | Apterygiformes | Apterygiformes |
| Famili | Apterygidae | Apterygidae |
| Status Konservasi | Vulnerable | Vulnerable |
| Panjang | — | — |
| Rentang Sayap | — | — |
| Berat | 2602,5 g (91.80 oz) | 2602,5 g (91.80 oz) |
| Diet | Nocturnal probe-feeder extracting earthworms, beetle larvae, and weta from moist forest soils using olfactory detection … | Probes North Island soils nocturnally for earthworms, cicada larvae, and huhu grubs; takes forest fruits … |
| Ukuran Sarang | 1-3 | 1-2 |
| Population Trend | — | — |
Habitat Comparison
Southern Brown Kiwi
Dense temperate rainforest, scrubland, and tussock grassland in South Island and Stewart Island, New Zealand. Nests in burrows or hollow logs. Requires thick ground cover and moist soils rich in invertebrates.
North Island Brown Kiwi
Subtropical and temperate forests, scrubland, grassland, and modified pasture on North Island, New Zealand. Nests in burrows under tree roots. Tolerates some habitat fragmentation but requires predator control to survive.
Song & Call Comparison
Southern Brown Kiwi
A loud, repeated 'kee-wee' shriek — the female's call that gives kiwis their name. Males give a higher-pitched, softer 'ki-wi'. Calls carry far through native forest at night.
North Island Brown Kiwi
Male gives a shrill, rising 'kee-wee-kee-wee', female a lower, rougher 'kurr-kurr-kurr'. Calls echo through North Island forest at dusk and dawn during their nocturnal forays.
Geographic Range & Migration
Southern Brown Kiwi
Restricted to South Island and Stewart Island, New Zealand. Flightless and sedentary in dense native forest and scrubland year-round.
North Island Brown Kiwi
Endemic to New Zealand's North Island; occupies forest fragments from Northland to Wellington. Flightless, non-migratory, and nocturnal.
Status Konservasi
Southern Brown Kiwi
North Island Brown Kiwi
How to Tell Them Apart
Southern Brown Kiwi
Dense, hair-like brown feathers streaked with rufous and dark brown give a shaggy appearance. No visible wings. Sexes similar; females notably larger. Cryptic plumage blends with forest floor.
North Island Brown Kiwi
Coarse, bristly dark rufous-brown feathers heavily streaked with blackish-brown. Lacks visible wings and tail. Sexes similar but females larger. Bill long and pale ivory. Legs robust and pale.
About These Birds
Southern Brown Kiwi
A robust flightless kiwi with coarse grey-brown hair-like feathers and a long decurved bill. Strictly nocturnal and largely solitary, probing leaf litter for earthworms, insects, and berries. Confined to South Island and Stewart Island of New Zealand. Lays the largest egg relative to body size of any bird.
North Island Brown Kiwi
The most widespread kiwi with shaggy reddish-brown plumage and a long pale bill. Nocturnal and territorial, using nostrils at the bill tip to sniff out invertebrates. Endemic to North Island, New Zealand. Endangered due to mammalian predators; subject to intensive conservation management.