“When the Weka Rail separated from Australia roughly sixty million years ago, New Zealand was devoid of land mammals, a fact that permitted numerous flightless birds to evolve. Man’s arrival along with cats, dogs, pigs and other domesticated predators, thus did more damage here than almost anywhere else on earth. The renowned kiwi is the only survivor from the moa family of grazing birds. On the two big islands, except for the kiwi, flightless birds have all but disappeared. But a number remain on Stewart Island, including tiny populations of kakapo, an almost flightless owl parrot, and of the flightless weka rail.” As seen in the 1989 Naturalist’s Diary.

Weka Rail
Original Acrylic on Paper, 8 x 5 1/2
$3,000

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