Science Learning Hub logo
TopicsConceptsCitizen scienceTeacher PLDGlossary
Sign in
Image

North and South Island piopio

Illustration of North and South Island piopio extinct birds

Drawing of the North Island Piopio, Turnagra tanagra and the South Island Piopio, Turnagra capensis. In 1888, Buller described the North Island piopio as New Zealand's rarest endemic bird species. The last confirmed sighting was in 1902. The South Island Piopio was extinct by 1897.

Illustration by J G Keulemans, in W L Buller's A History of the Birds of New Zealand. 2nd edition. Published 1888.

Glossary

Rights: J. G. Keulemans, CC BY-SA 3.0
Published: 3 August 2023Size: 433.48 KB
Referencing Hub media

Explore related content

Appears inRelated resources
Call of the huia: how NZ’s bird of the century contest helps us express ‘ecological grief’

Article

Call of the huia: how NZ’s bird of the century contest helps us express ‘ecological grief’

By including five extinct species in its Bird of the Year competition, Forest & Bird is providing a way to ...

Read more
1948 photo of 3 men with 2 rediscovered takahē, Lake Orbell.

Article

Takahē conservation efforts

Takahē once lived throughout Te Waipounamu South Island. Māori reported that their night cry sounded like the striking of two ...

Read more
Brown kiwi amongst ferns on the ground.

Article

Introducing kiwi

The kiwi shape is distinctive. Aotearoa New Zealand’s flightless, nocturnal, endemic icon is world famous for its long bill, pear-shaped ...

Read more
New Zealand Subantarctic Islands group

Article

New Zealand Subantarctic Islands group

The Auckland Islands are often described as a hotspot of biodiversity, with a wide variety of seabirds, invertebrates and marine ...

Read more

See our newsletters here.

NewsEventsAboutContact usPrivacyCopyrightHelp

The Science Learning Hub Pokapū Akoranga Pūtaiao is funded through the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment's Science in Society Initiative.

Science Learning Hub Pokapū Akoranga Pūtaiao © 2007-2025 The University of Waikato Te Whare Wānanga o Waikato