Skip to player
Skip to main content
Skip to footer
Search
Connect
Watch fullscreen
Like
Bookmark
Share
Add to Playlist
Report
Meet the ecologist spreading her wings in New Zealand to save seabirds
euronews (in English)
Follow
04/12/2023
"You can't expect to save a whole species in a month. Don't give up. We need to keep fighting. The alternative is to just let it all crumble. We can't do that."
Category
🗞
News
Transcript
Display full video transcript
00:00
[MUSIC PLAYING]
00:02
I never thought I would be standing on a cliff,
00:05
poking my hand into burrows and pulling birds out of it,
00:08
for sure.
00:11
But I've always had this idea that my work
00:13
would be quite adventurous, interesting, and dynamic.
00:15
[MUSIC PLAYING]
00:18
I have field work, but I'm also in front of the computer.
00:21
It's very fulfilling and very intellectually stimulating.
00:27
I feel really lucky.
00:28
Not many people can say that they've had that chance
00:30
to take their results and make a difference.
00:33
My name is Maida Fessardi.
00:34
I'm a seabird ecologist.
00:36
[MUSIC PLAYING]
00:55
Seabirds are the most threatened group of birds in the world.
00:59
But great-faced petrels are pretty special,
01:02
because they are one of the only seabird species in New Zealand
01:05
that's still living in mainland.
01:08
They are actually doing relatively well,
01:10
compared to all the other seabirds.
01:12
They are one of the only species of seabirds in New Zealand
01:15
that are not threatened.
01:16
We want to find out why they're doing so well,
01:18
even though other birds are not.
01:21
We know the kind of habitat the seabirds like to nest,
01:25
and we're going to go into this habitat.
01:29
I grab the bird from the burrow and do a visual health check.
01:33
I do just general measurements.
01:35
So I weigh them and measure the part of their leg,
01:38
wing length as well.
01:41
We ID them to make sure that we can check them yearly.
01:44
After I finish all of that, I will put the birds back
01:47
into the burrow, hopefully use that information
01:50
to restore seabird populations.
01:52
We have to be careful.
02:04
We just need to minimize stress to those birds.
02:06
We're doing it for them, but we also
02:09
can't add to the threats that they're facing.
02:11
So we need to be respectful of it.
02:15
Maida and I have been working on a number of projects
02:19
that they're all seabird-based.
02:21
I've been a mentor with Maida pretty much from the start.
02:24
She was one of our summer students in our program.
02:30
She eventually would do a master's.
02:33
When I was doing my thesis, I was
02:35
looking at feather brightness as a monitoring tool.
02:39
That got incorporated into the Auckland Council Seabird
02:41
Monitoring Program.
02:43
So that was a huge milestone to me, to finish my master's
02:46
and start this job at council doing seabird monitoring.
02:50
We can actually tell a lot by just looking at a feather.
02:59
The spectrometer measures the reflectance
03:02
on feather pigmentation.
03:04
Just like us with our hair and our nails,
03:07
if they have good feathers with bright colors,
03:09
that means that they're probably doing well.
03:12
If they ingest heavy metal contaminants,
03:14
while they are growing feathers, that's
03:16
deposited in their feathers.
03:19
We can measure how much contaminants they've
03:22
been ingesting in their diet.
03:24
And they can tell us if that's a threat for the population
03:26
or if the area they are foraging is contaminated.
03:30
All this data that we are collecting
03:32
and all this information that we're gathering,
03:34
one day will be applied into management.
03:39
We spend a lot of time planning and strategizing
03:42
development of programs and the next steps.
03:44
Seabirds tend to breed along the coastlines
03:47
where the most desirable property is for humans.
03:50
So there's habitat loss that has occurred.
03:54
The wooden boxes are important because sometimes there's
03:56
quite a bit of competition between seabirds
03:58
for prime habitat.
04:00
They end up not breeding because they don't find it.
04:02
So the wooden boxes mimic the natural environment
04:04
of the burrow.
04:05
They will attract more birds to areas
04:07
that we're trying to repopulate.
04:09
Seabirds were perfect because they just
04:11
joined all my worlds together, both geographically
04:15
but also ecologically.
04:17
It really resonated with me and what
04:19
I wanted to do with my life.
04:20
The first thing that attracted me to seabirds
04:26
was to hear immigrants like me.
04:29
I was born in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
04:31
I was born in the United States.
04:33
I was born in the United States.
04:34
I was born in the United States.
04:35
I was born in the United States.
04:37
I was born in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
04:39
And I live in Auckland, New Zealand.
04:41
They breed in New Zealand, but they go all the way
04:43
to South America, for example.
04:45
That attracted me because I wanted to be able to work here
04:47
but also have an impact on where I come from.
04:50
It can be quite challenging.
04:59
There's a lot of weight bearing and some days of hiking.
05:03
It's 12 hours hiking, very tough terrains.
05:08
We go to some very interesting places.
05:10
It's a wonderful world to interact with it,
05:12
but it's also a lot of hard work.
05:16
There's a lot of negativity around conservation right now.
05:21
It can be quite depressing.
05:25
You can't be expecting to save a whole species in a month.
05:31
Don't give up.
05:32
We need to keep fighting.
05:34
The alternative is to just let it all crumble.
05:40
We can't do that.
05:41
I want to keep doing this work.
05:44
There's still an opportunity to make a difference here.
05:47
We can still save species.
05:50
[MUSIC PLAYING]
05:55
[MUSIC PLAYING]
05:58
(upbeat music)
06:01
(upbeat music)
Recommended
1:55
|
Up next
Back from the brink of extinction: The Spix’s macaws are returning to the wild
euronews (in English)
03/06/2022
2:53
India’s weirdest frog and an ‘ugly shark’: These species aren't cuddly but they still need saving
euronews (in English)
07/06/2023
2:03
How can this ‘bongo park’ save a species from extinction?
euronews (in English)
08/03/2022
1:55
Conservationists fear that without a recovery plan, the Tasmanian azure kingfisher could go extinct
ABC NEWS (Australia)
08/10/2023
7:05
World Wildlife Day: Know Top 5 Species That Might Go Extinct Very Soon |Explainer| Oneindia News
Oneindia
03/03/2023
2:42
Defend Nature
GreenTV
21/02/2019
1:48
‘New hope’: Tiny Galápagos island birds make promising comebackÂ
euronews (in English)
12/05/2023
1:50
Rare species being saved from extinction in Victoria
ABC NEWS (Australia)
21/03/2022
3:06
How can cloning help conservationists save extinct species?
euronews (in English)
18/03/2021
0:45
Zoo races to save fish species from extinction after discovering it has last one
National World - Other Local Sites
19/11/2024
1:46
Researchers in the US are resurrecting dead birds and returning them to the skies as hi-tech drones
euronews (in English)
16/04/2023
1:45
Two of the world's rarest parrot chicks hatch at Chester Zoo
NationalWorld.com
14/12/2023
6:00
The jungle environmentalist saving elephants in Thailand
euronews (in English)
28/06/2022
2:31
SA locals working alongside conservationists to save the endangered Eastern Osprey
ABC NEWS (Australia)
30/06/2024
2:19
The Pantanal
GreenTV
21/02/2019
0:59
Saving Grace: A Heroic Humpback Whale Rescue
Love This
15/03/2023
1:37
Extinction
Zinc
10/03/2017
1:21
Animals at risk of extinction in Australia after ‘ecological bomb’ destroys habitats
euronews (in English)
19/07/2022
1:00
Meet the endangered baby tapir on an important mission
euronews (in English)
20/07/2021
2:25
Ecuador strikes world's biggest 'debt for nature' deal to protect the Galápagos Islands
euronews (in English)
10/05/2023
1:42
Endangered macadamia nut is being saved from extinction by conservationists
ABC NEWS (Australia)
07/11/2024
2:04
South Korea's 'high security seed vault' is ready for an apocalypse
euronews (in English)
02/06/2021
0:45
Endangered Species List Grows: Over 2,000 Species Now at Risk, Says International Union for Conservation of Nature
Benzinga
12/12/2023
3:24
Endangered Species Day 2020: 5 Animals At Risk Of Extinction In The World
Newsweek
14/05/2020
2:01
Hungarian scientists capture majestic wild horses in their natural habitats thanks to drones
euronews (in English)
11/07/2024