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Kakapo parrots

เผยแพร่:   โดย: MGR Online

Codfish Island, NEW ZEALAND: This undated handout image received on June 20, 2012 from New Zealands Department of Conservation shows three rare green kakapo parrots on Codfish Island, off the South Island, an offshore sanctuary where the flightless birds have been bred since 1990. Flightless, slow-moving and at times more sexually attracted to humans than their own species, its small wonder New Zealands kakapo parrot is on the verge of extinction. AFP PHOTO/Don Merton/New Zealand Department of Conservation
Being sexually attracted to humans than their own species, rare green kakapo parrots are nearly extinct in New Zealand.
WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND: This photo taken on June 19, 2012 shows a kakapo sperm helmet on display at Wellingtons Te Papa museum, which was once used by conservation workers in an unsuccessful attempt to harvest semen from New Zealands rare kakapo parrot. Flightless, slow-moving and at times more sexually attracted to humans than their own species, its small wonder New Zealands kakapo parrot is on the verge of extinction. The plump, green kakapo -- the name means night parrot in Maori -- was once one of the most common birds in New Zealand, which had few land predators before European settlement in the early Nineteenth Century. AFP PHOTO/Neil Sands/New Zealand Department of Conservation
Codfish Island, NEW ZEALAND: This undated handout image received on June 20, 2012 from New Zealands Department of Conservation shows a green kakapo on Codfish Island, off the South Island, an offshore sanctuary where the flightless birds have been bred since 1990. Flightless, slow-moving and at times more sexually attracted to humans than their own species, its small wonder New Zealands kakapo parrot is on the verge of extinction. AFP PHOTO/Ho/New Zealand Department of Conservation
Codfish Island, NEW ZEALAND: This undated handout image received on June 20, 2012 from New Zealands Department of Conservation shows a rare green kakapo parrot and chick on Codfish Island, off the South Island, an offshore sanctuary where the flightless birds have been bred since 1990. Flightless, slow-moving and at times more sexually attracted to humans than their own species, its small wonder New Zealands kakapo parrot is on the verge of extinction. AFP PHOTO/Don Merton/New Zealand Department of Conservation
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