n., pl., -is.
A honeyeater (Prosthemadera novaeseelandiae) of New Zealand, having dark plumage with white feathers on the throat. Also called parson bird.
[Maori tūī.]
Dictionary:
tu·i (tū'ē)
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[Maori tūī.]
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Prosthemadera novaeseelandiae
TAXONOMY
Merops novaeseelandiae Gmelin, 1788, Queen Charlotte Sound, New Zealand.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
English: Parson bird; French: Tui cravate-frisée; German: Tui; Spanish: Pájaro Sacerdote.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
10.5–12.5 in (27–32 cm); male 4.3 oz (120 g), female 3 oz (85g). Dark, iridescent plumage with two white throat tufts. Back and flanks dark reddish brown. White collar and wing bars.
DISTRIBUTION
New Zealand, including North Island, western and southeastern South Island (patchy on the rest of South Island), Stewart Island, other offshore islands, Chatham Islands, Raoul Island in Kermadecs, and possibly vagrant on Snares and Auckland Islands.
HABITAT
Podocarp, broadleaf, and beech forest, including remnants and regrowth. Also in dense exotic vegetation and in parks and gardens.
BEHAVIOR
Hold breeding territories and occur in loose groups outside breeding season, when males dominate females and tuis dominate other honeyeaters. May perform corroborees in small groups near the ground. Resident, but with local movements; more common in winter in urban areas. Males display song flights. Song is highly complex, and tuis have been deemed among the best singers in the world. The song is rich, melodious, and includes soft liquid warbling notes, bell-like calls, and chimes interspersed with sighs, sobs, coughs, laughs, sneezes, etc. Noisy flight is due to wing slots.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
Feed on nectar from a wide range of plants, including Metrosideros, Fuchsia, and New Zealand flax (Phormium tenax). Glean insects, especially from foliage, and even sandhoppers (Amphipoda). Fruit is also an important component of the diet from late summer to winter. Honeydew is consumed from scale insects on beech trees.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Breed mostly October to January. The large, untidy nest is placed in fork or shrub or tree. The clutch of two to four (occasionally five) eggs is incubated by the female. Incubation and fledging periods are about 14 days. Young are fed by both parents, but more by female. Nests preyed on by introduced mammals and birds.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Not threatened, but has declined in many areas during nineteenth and twentieth centuries due to habitat loss, hunting, and predation by introduced mammals and birds.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
Hunted by Maoris, especially consumed at feasts, and Europeans, who made pasties (pies) from them. Skins have been used in ladies' hats. Occasionally kept as pets.
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| Wikipedia: Tui (bird) |
| Tūī | |
|---|---|
| Tui on a flax bush. Note the pollen on its head. | |
| Conservation status | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Aves |
| Order: | Passeriformes |
| Family: | Meliphagidae |
| Genus: | Prosthemadera Gray, 1840 |
| Species: | P. novaeseelandiae |
| Binomial name | |
| Prosthemadera novaeseelandiae (Gmelin, 1788) |
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The Tui (Prosthemadera novaeseelandiae) is an endemic passerine bird of New Zealand. It is one of the largest members of the diverse honeyeater family.
The name Tui is from the Maori language name tūī and is the species' formal common name. The plural is simply 'Tui', following Māori usage. The English name, Parson Bird, has fallen into disuse but came about because at first glance the Tui appears completely black except for a small tuft of white feathers at its neck and a small white wing patch, causing it to resemble a parson in religious attire.
On closer inspection it can be seen—and from the photo—that Tui have faded browner patches on the back and flanks, a multicoloured iridescent sheen that varies with the angle from which the light strikes them, and a dusting of small, white-shafted feathers on the back and sides of the neck that produce a lacy collar.
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Tui are considered to be very intelligent, much like parrots. They also resemble parrots in their ability to clearly imitate human speech,[1] and are known for their noisy, unusual call, different for each individual, that combine bellbird-like notes with clicks, cackles, timber-like creaks and groans, and wheezing sounds—the unusual possession of two voiceboxes[2] enable Tui to perform such a myriad of vocalisations.
Some of the huge range of Tui sounds are beyond the human register. Watching a Tui sing, one can observe gaps in the sound when the beak is agape and throat tufts throbbing. Tui will also sing at night, especially around the full moon period.[3]
Nectar is the normal diet but fruit and insects are frequently eaten, and pollen and seeds more occasionally. Particularly popular is the New Zealand flax, whose nectar sometimes ferments, resulting in the Tui flying in a fashion that suggests that they might be drunk. Tui are the main pollinators of flax, kowhai, kaka beak and some other plants. Note that the flowers of the three plants mentioned are similar in shape to the Tui's beak—a vivid example of mutualistic coevolution[citation needed].
Male Tui can be extremely aggressive, chasing all other birds (large and small) from their territory with loud flapping and sounds akin to rude human speech. This is especially true of other Tui when possession of a favoured feeding tree is impinged. Birds will often erect their body feathers in order to appear larger in an attempt to intimidate a rival. They have even been known to mob harriers and magpies.[4] The powered flight of Tui is quite loud as they have developed short wide wings, giving excellent manoeuverability in the dense forest they prefer, but requiring rapid flapping. They can be seen to perform a mating display of rising at speed in a vertical climb in clear air, before stalling and dropping into a powered dive, then repeating.[4] Much of this behaviour is more notable during the breeding season of early spring—September and October. Females alone build nests of twigs, grasses and mosses.[4]
Tui are found through much of New Zealand, particularly the North Island, the west and south coasts of the South Island, Stewart Island/Rakiura and the Chatham Islands—where an endangered sub-species particular to these islands exists. Other populations live on Raoul Island in the Kermadecs,[5] and in the Auckland Islands (where, with the New Zealand Bellbird, it is the most southerly species of honeyeater).[6] Populations have declined considerably since European settlement, mainly as a result of widespread habitat destruction and predation by mammalian invasive species.
Nonetheless, the species is considered secure and has made recoveries in some areas, particularly after removal of livestock has allowed vegetation to recover. Predation by introduced species remains a threat, particularly stoats, the Common Myna (which competes with Tui for food and sometimes takes eggs), and rats.
Tui prefer broadleaf forests below 1500 metres[citation needed]. but will tolerate quite small remnant patches, regrowth, exotic plantations and well-vegetated suburbs. They are one of the most common birds found in urban Wellington. They are usually seen singly, in pairs, or in small family groups, but will congregate in large numbers at suitable food sources, often in company with Silvereyes, Bellbirds (another New Zealand honeyeater), or Kererū (native New Zealand pigeon) in any combination. Generally, when interspecific competition for the same food resources among New Zealand's three species of honeyeater occurs, there is a hierarchy with the Tui at the top, with bellbirds and stitchbirds successively subordinate to the species above them—they are thus frequently chased off by Tui at a food source such as a flowering flax plant.
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