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Rare skinks return to southern home

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Hokitika – Twenty-one rare Kapitia skinks relocated from Auckland Zoo have returned to their home habitat on the West Coast.

The skinks, whose conservation status is critically threatened are only found in a one kilometre coastal strip near Hokitika. When Cyclone Fehi hit the area hard in 2018 the Department of Conservation moved 50 of them to Auckland Zoo for safekeeping. There they bred successfully, almost doubling their numbers.

Since the cyclone, the Kapitia Scientific Reserve has been established as a safe haven for the skinks which are distinguished by their salmon-coloured underside and a prehensile tail. The tail indicates they are adapted to a life in trees as they can use it to grip objects and help them climb.

DoC Hokitika operations manager Owen Kilgour says this is the third and final translocation of these skinks.

“In November 2021 we moved 42 skinks into the newly finished reserve. Twenty gravid females and three juveniles remained at Auckland Zoo and were subsequently released last November. A further 21 offspring from the 20 females which were too young to release in 2022 are back home.

“The predator free reserve has been a great success and the skinks in there are thriving. As well as threats to their habitat from storm damage, the Kapitia skinks are vulnerable to predators such as rats and mice, which attack them if they are too cold to move and eat them alive.”

Some Kapitia skinks found in the wild have also been moved into the reserve. DoC’s lizard technical advisory group has been a huge support for this project from the start and I’m really grateful for the dedication of the DoC Hokitika staff.

Auckland Zoo head of animal care and conservation, Richard Gibson says the final release of Kapitia skinks from the Zoo was a bitter-sweet moment for his team.

“We’ve been privileged to work with these extraordinarily rare and interesting little skinks for five years, since they were proactively removed from harm’s way as part of a multi-disciplinary recovery initiative.

“We have learnt a great deal about their behaviour and diet preferences, which will inform habitat restoration inside their reserve. We also managed to almost double the number of skinks originally received.

“Seeing them return to the West Coast in just five short years – a blink of an eye in conservation terms – is remarkable and a testament to what dedicated and focused partnership can achieve.”

Photo: One of the newly released skinks at the Kapitia Scientific Reserve

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