Rock wren | Pīwauwau
Xenicus gilviventris Pelzeln, 1867
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Acanthisittidae
New Zealand status: Endemic
Conservation status: Nationally Endangered
Other names: New Zealand rock wren, piwauwau, mātuitui, matuitui, South Island wren, tuke
Geographical variation: The subspecies rineyi was proposed for birds found in Fiordland, but is not currently recognised. Variation in rock wren throughout their range is under investigation.
The rock wren is a small, ground-feeding subpasserine found in the Southern Alps of the South Island. It remains above the bush line throughout its life and is the only truly alpine bird in New Zealand. The New Zealand wrens (Family Acanthisittidae) are an ancient and endemic lineage that up until 1000 years ago included 7 species in 5 genera. Only the rock wren and the rifleman survive. The rock wren has a disjunct distribution because of its preferred habitat of alpine basins and its habit of hole-nesting on the ground leads to predation by mice and stoats. These characteristics make the species vulnerable to local extinctions.
Identification
The rock wren is a small, alpine bird with short tail, rounded wings and long legs and toes. The male is dull green above and grey-brown below with yellow flanks. Pale tips to the secondary feathers usually form a row of pale spots on the lower back when perched. The female is slightly plainer, mainly olive-brown. Rock wrens bob vigorously along with wing flicks, and usually hop and run rather than flying.
Voice: a high pitched three note call and a ‘whirring’ call.
Similar species: the rifleman is similar but the habitat of each is unlikely to overlap. The rock wren is larger and has a shorter and straighter bill. The bush wren (considered extinct since 1972) was very similar to rock wren but was darker underneath (contrasting with a paler chin), and lacked pale tips to the secondaries.
Distribution and habitat
Rock wrens are widely but patchily distributed through alpine and sub-alpine areas of the South Island. They are most common within the Southern Alps from Fiordland, through South Westland, and Mt Aspiring and Mt Cook National Parks. Localised populations exist further north in Arthur's Pass, Nelson Lakes and Kahurangi National Parks. Rock wrens are less abundant and even more localised in the Eyre Mountains, and parts of inland Canterbury and the Victoria Range. Many of these locations are seemingly disjunct from other rock wren populations. They are found from 900 m to 2500 m in altitude where the habitat may vary from dense sub-alpine scrub, through talus where stable rock falls are interspersed with low shrubbery to bare rock in very exposed situations. Rock wrens are no longer present in the Kaikoura Mountains and have never been confirmed from Stewart Island, the Takitimu Mountains and the Paparoa Range.
Rock wren were transferred successfully to Secretary Island in Fiordland in 2008-10.
Population
Not known.
Threats and conservation
Stoats and mice are known to prey on the contents of rock wren nests. There is little information on how frequently this occurs and whether the intensity of predation varies between years dependent on changes in tussock seeding, which affects mouse (and therefore stoat) population densities. During the 2012-13 summer a study in the upper Hollyford showed that most nests were preyed on by stoats. Changes in distribution and the frequency of sightings suggest that rock wren are declining. At present all rock wren habitat is above the altitudinal limit for ship rats but this may change with global warming, and cause an increase in predation. The conservation of this species was changed from nationally vulnerable to nationally endangered in 2013.
Breeding
Rock wrens breed in spring and summer. A thickly lined and fully enclosed nest is constructed at ground level within a natural cavity. The average clutch size is 3, with only one brood reared in a season. Both adults incubate the eggs and care for the young.
Behaviour and ecology
Rock wren typically spend most time hopping and flitting through the alpine boulder fields they inhabit, calling intermittently to others. Foraging birds will occasionally disappear amongst large rocks or into the surrounding dense alpine shrubbery. When stationary the bird bobs up and down, often with flicking wings. Flights are short and close to the ground. This behaviour suggests a sedentary species with poor dispersal ability and yet there have been occasional records in previously uninhabited alpine areas and in valley floors. Birds are known to over-winter in the alpine zone. One banded bird survived for 5 years. Rock wrens often have an anklet of dead skin around one or both legs.
Food
Rock wren mainly eat insects (especially moths, moth larvae, flies, beetles, scale insects) and spiders. Fruit from Gaultheria and Coprosma spp. are also eaten.
Websites
http://www.nzbirds.com/birds/rockwren.html
References
Michelsen-Heath, S. 1989. The breeding biology of the rock wren, Xenicus gilviventris, in the Murchison Mountains, Fiordland National Park, New Zealand. Unpubl. M.Sc. thesis, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Michelsen-Heath, S; Gaze, P. 2007. Changes in abundance and distribution of the rock wren (Xenicus gilviventris) in the South Island, New Zealand. Notornis 54: 71-78.
Robertson, H.A; Baird, K.; Elliott, G.P.; Hitchmough, R.A.; McArthur, N.J.; Makan, T.; Miskelly, C.M.; O’Donnell, C.F.J.; Sagar, P.M.; Scofield, R.P.; Taylor, G.A.; Michel, P. 2021. Conservation status of birds in Aotearoa New Zealand birds, 2021. New Zealand Threat Classification Series 36. Wellington, Department of Conservation. 43p.
Recommended citation
Gaze, P.D. 2013 [updated 2022]. Rock wren | pīwauwau. In Miskelly, C.M. (ed.) New Zealand Birds Online. www.nzbirdsonline.org.nz
Rock wren | Pīwauwau
- Social structure
- monogamous
- Breeding season
-
- Jul
- Aug
- Sep
- Oct
- Nov
- Dec
- Jan
- Feb
- Mar
- Apr
- May
- Jun
- Nest type
- enclosed dome
- Nest description
- Completely enclosed nest, apart from a small entrance hole. Made of native grasses and deeply insulated and line with feathers.
- Nest height (mean)
- 0 m
- Nest height (min)
- 0 m
- Nest height (max)
- 0 m
- Maximum number of successful broods
- 1
- Clutch size (mean)
- 3.1
- Clutch size (min)
- 1
- Clutch size (max)
- 5
- Mean egg dimensions (length)
- 20.3 mm
- Mean egg dimensions (width)
- 15.5 mm
- Egg colour
- Cream-white
- Egg laying dates
-
- Jul
- Aug
- Sep
- Oct
- Nov
- Dec
- Jan
- Feb
- Mar
- Apr
- May
- Jun
- Interval between eggs in a clutch
- Alternate days days
- Incubation behaviour
- shared
- Incubation length (mean)
- 19 days
- Incubation length (min)
- 18 days
- Incubation length (max)
- 22 days
- Nestling type
- altricial
- Nestling period (mean)
- 24 days
- Nestling period (min)
- 21 days
- Nestling period (max)
- 26 days
- Age at fledging (mean)
- 24 days
- Age at fledging (min)
- 21 days
- Age at fledging (max)
- 26 days
- Age at independence (min)
- 10 days
- Age at independence (max)
- 15 days
- Age at first breeding (typical)
- 1 year
- Maximum longevity
- Unknown
- Maximum dispersal
- 0.5 km