Main content

New Zealand Bellbird

Chris Packham presents the New Zealand bellbird.

Tweet of the Day is the voice of birds and our relationship with them, from around the world.

Chris Packham presents the New Zealand bellbird. In 1770, during Captain James Cook's first voyage to New Zealand, an extraordinary dawn chorus caught the attention of his crew "like small bells exquisitely tuned": these were New Zealand bellbirds. New Zealand bellbirds are olive green birds with curved black bills and brush-like tongues which they use to probe flowers for nectar. Like other honeyeaters, they play an important role in pollinating flowers and also eat the fruits which result from those pollinations and so help to spread the seeds. The well camouflaged bellbird is more often heard before it is seen. They sing throughout the day, but at their best at dawn or dusk when pairs duet or several birds chorus together. Their song can vary remarkably, and it is possible to hear different 'accents' in different parts of New Zealand, even across relatively short distances.

Producer : Andrew Dawes

Available now

2 minutes

Last on

Tue 15 Aug 2023 05:58

New Zealand bellbird (Anthornis melanura)

Webpage image courtesy of Brent Stephenson / naturepl.com.

NPL Ref Β© Brent Stephenson / naturepl.com

Recording of New Zealand bellbird by Matthew D Medler / Ref: ML1361111

This programme contains a wildtrack Β kindly provided by The Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology; recorded by Matthew D Medler on 12 Apr 2004, in Te Urewera National Park, Hawkes Bay, New Zealand.

Broadcasts

  • Tue 4 Nov 2014 05:58
  • Mon 12 Oct 2015 05:58
  • Sun 18 Oct 2015 08:58
  • Fri 16 Aug 2019 05:58
  • Fri 20 Aug 2021 05:58
  • Sun 24 Jul 2022 08:58
  • Tue 15 Aug 2023 05:58

Podcast: Planet Puffin

Podcast: Planet Puffin

Exploring all things puffin - the silly and the serious, the scientific and the cultural.

Try this new podcast

Five stories of birds and birdsong are told by the people inspired by them.

Podcast