Nz Fantail Facts

Nz Fantail Facts



1/18/2019  · The New Zealand Fantail is a small songbird that is common in forests and parks on the North, South, and Stewart Islands. They are an easily recognized bird both due to the coloration of their tails and their flight pattern. At times they will open up their tail .


The fantail is one of the few native bird species in New Zealand that has been able to adapt to an environment greatly altered by humans. Originally a bird of open native forests and scrub, it is now also found in exotic plantation forests, in orchards and in gardens.


The fantail is one of New Zealand’s best known birds, with its distinctive fanned tail and loud song, and particularly because it often approaches within a metre or two of people. Its wide distribution and habitat preferences, including frequenting well-treed urban parks and gardens, means that most people encounter fantails occasionally.


The fantail makes a beautifully compact, cup-shaped nest out of fibres, moss and bark, lined inside with horsehair and a coating of cobwebs. He may have four or five broods in one season (usually between August and January), and the tiny chicks are hatched in 15 days.


8 Fantail Facts – A Native New Zealand Bird – New Zealand …


8 Fantail Facts – A Native New Zealand Bird – New Zealand …


8 Fantail Facts – A Native New Zealand Bird – New Zealand …


Fantail – Wikipedia, This fantastic New Zealand birds fact file will be a great addition to any Native animal study. Your children can learn about the NZ fantail , or p?wakawaka as it is known in M?ori. Use it for display, research or to prompt discussions.


They are not fussy eaters, and eat a variety of insects, moths and spiders. Larger insects are firmly held in their claws and dismembered into manageable sizes leaving behind only the indigestible wings. Although p?wakawaka are doing okay in New Zealand at the moment, climate change may still affect these little orbs.


Willie Wagtail, Rufous Fantail, White-throated Fantail, New Zealand Fantail, Northern Fantail

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