Little Spotted Kiwi
Apteryx owenii
The little spotted kiwi (Apteryx owenii), or kiwi pukupuku, is the smallest living kiwi and one of New Zealand's most carefully managed birds. It has shaggy grey-brown plumage, tiny nonfunctional wings, strong legs, whisker-like facial feathers, and a long bill with nostrils near the tip. Once present on the mainland, the species now survives chiefly on predator-free offshore islands and fenced sanctuaries after severe losses from introduced mammals. At night it probes leaf litter and soil for insects, worms, larvae, fruit, and fungi.
Little spotted kiwi are protected wildlife, not pets or ordinary aviary birds. Conservation teams manage them through predator exclusion, translocation, banding or microchip identification, burrow checks, acoustic surveys, and careful genetic planning among island and sanctuary populations. Any zoo or public display setting must be quiet, dim, and forested, with deep soil and minimal disturbance because kiwi rely on scent and touch more than sight. For land managers and visitors in kiwi country, keeping dogs controlled and preventing predator reinvasion are as important as the birds' direct handling.
Colors: Black, Brown, Cream, Gray, Green, Olive, Orange, Red, Tan, White, Wild Type, Yellow Accent