Yes. Takahe are birds, and all birds have wings. Even flightless birds have wings, though they are of little or no use.
kakapo, Chatham Albatross, takahe, kaki, kaka
Originally the takahe had no predators, but when People came to its habitat in New Zealand, they brought goats, which ate the vegetation and ruined the enviroment, and rats who ate the takahe's eggs. People tried to get rid of rats, which had become the takahe's main predator, by introducing weasels, but the weasels just ate more takahe as well as baby takahe. So to answer your question, rats, weasels, and man are the takahe's predators.
Five birds would be left.
Kiwi, Kakapo, Takahe, Weka, Auckland Island Teal, Campbell Island Teal, Moa (extinct).
The takahe is a large, flightless bird belonging to the rail family. It is endemic to New Zealand and was thought to be extinct but was rediscovered by Geoffrey Orbell in the Murchinson mountains in 1948.
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There are four birds left
Originally the takahe had no predators, but when People came to its habitat in New Zealand, they brought goats, which ate the vegetation and ruined the enviroment, and rats who ate the takahe's eggs. People tried to get rid of rats, which had become the takahe's main predator, by introducing weasels, but the weasels just ate more takahe as well as baby takahe. So to answer your question, rats, weasels, and man are the takahe's predators.
People.
No. It is a bird.
The takahe, a flightless bird of New Zealand, can grow to about 63 cm in length and weigh up to 4kg.