held by Merton,
Codfish Island / Whenua Hou, November 2010. Richard Henry spent the past 35 years on four predatory-mammal-free islands. Named after
Richard Treacy Henry the pioneer conservationist, and from 1894 to 1910, custodian of
Resolution Island, New Zealand he was the last known survivor of his species from mainland New Zealand and was believed to be more than 100 years old. Richard Henry's legacy: His one female and two male off-spring hatched on
Maud Island in 1998 may hold the key to genetic rescue of a species suffering from chronic lack of genetic diversity. Richard Henry kākāpō was found dead on Codfish Island / Whenua Hou on 24 December 2010. Together with NZWS colleagues and volunteers, his contributions include: • pioneered capture and
translocation techniques
as management tools in the rescue and recovery of endangered birds: In the early 1960s Merton led some of the first successful translocations for conservation purposes involving
New Zealand birds – including establishment of a second population of the
North Island saddleback, and averting extinction of the
South Island saddleback. Techniques pioneered then are now an everyday part of threatened species management within NZ and beyond; • pioneered "close order management" (COM) as a means of averting extinction; sustaining in the wild; and/or facilitating recovery of critically endangered species. COM involves intensive management of free-living animals at the individual rather than population level. The concept and techniques were developed and applied with outstanding success during the rescue and recovery of the
black robin which Merton led in the 1980s. Refined and adapted over the years, close order management techniques pioneered then are now an integral part of threatened species recovery programmes internationally. • helped pioneer island biodiversity conservation and restoration techniques. For instance, in the early 1960s, he and Royal Forest & Bird Protection Society of New Zealand volunteers eradicated
Norway rats from four small islands in the Noises group,
Hauraki Gulf. This was the first time that rats had been deliberately eradicated from a New Zealand island and opened the way for
ecological restoration of these – and many other islands both within New Zealand and beyond; • led the NZWS field teams that re-discovered the kākāpō parrot (in
Fiordland) in 1974, and females of this species (on
Stewart Island) in 1980. Females had not been seen since the early 1900s and it was feared they may have been extinct – and thus the species "functionally extinct"; • discovered and documented the significance of the ritualised, nocturnal booming display of the kākāpō – it is, in fact, an unusual form of courtship display known as "
lekking"; • instrumental in averting imminent extinction of kākāpō (an endemic, monotypic sub-family): In the early 1980s; (i) determined that the newly re-discovered kākāpō population of southern Stewart Island was in steep decline due to predation by feral cats (~53% mortality per annum of marked adults); (ii) alerted NZWS, drafted submissions and obtained agreement from the various government and other agencies to relocate (and thus effectively destroy) the last natural population; and, (iii) as NZWS's Principal Wildlife Officer (Endangered Species), assumed responsibility for planning and leading the capture and relocation of all remaining (61) birds to Little Barrier, Maud and Codfish Islands. This action proved very successful – the steep decline in kākāpō numbers was halted and adult mortality since (~30 years) has averaged a remarkably low ~1.3% per annum; • led the field project and devised the techniques necessary to capture, hold in captivity, transport and establish a second population of the endangered and highly localised
noisy scrubbird of Western Australia. The second population is now by far the larger of the two; • during the 1980s helped devise and implement a recovery strategy for the critically endangered
Mauritius parakeet of
Mauritius (Indian Ocean). Only around eight birds including three females were known to exist at that time. There are now more than 300 in the wild; • also during the 1980s, devised and led the successful eradication of rabbits from
Round Island, Mauritius (Indian Ocean) – Round Island was said to support more threatened animal and plant forms than any comparable area on Earth, but survival of these was seriously threatened by the rabbits; • instrumental in the designation of a national park within the Australian Territory of
Christmas Island (Indian Ocean) to facilitate survival of
Abbott's booby (largest and most endangered
gannet) and a unique raised tropical
island ecosystem – while seconded for two years to the Australian National Parks & Wildlife Service as its first Conservator on Christmas Island; • played a key role in the rescue and recovery of the magpie robin and other animals endemic to the
Seychelles Islands (Indian Ocean): In 1990 – 1992, in collaboration with
BirdLife International staff, designed and implemented an effective recovery strategy and range of management techniques for the critically endangered
Seychelles magpie-robin, the last ~20 individuals of which were confined to the 219 ha
Fregate Island. Then, in 1995 when
Norway rats reached Fregate Island, (final refuge of the last natural population of Seychelles magpie robin and a number of other vulnerable endemic life-forms), alerted the island's owner, and local and international conservation agencies to the fact that without intervention ecological collapse and extinctions were inevitable. Worked with stakeholders and by 1999 convinced all that eradication was both necessary and practicable. At their request planned, and in 2000 led a successful rodent (Norway rat and
house mouse) eradication – thus averting extinctions and facilitating ecological recovery. • authored or co-authored ~150 publications, including books, peer-reviewed scientific papers, popular articles and technical reports. In New Zealand Merton is also known for his role in the rescue of the South Island saddleback when in the early 1960s rats
Rattus rattus invaded its final refuge –
Taukihepa / Big South Cape Island; for facilitating recovery in the North Island saddleback, confined in the early 1960s to a single island (
Taranga/Hen Island); for his role, since 1974, in developing the rescue strategy and techniques, and for his role in the rescue and recovery programme for the giant, flightless, nocturnal kākāpō parrot; and for devising the rescue strategy and leading the successful rescue and recovery of the
Chatham Islands black robin when in the late 1970s its numbers fell to just seven individuals – including only one effective breeding pair. The black robin now numbers about 250 individuals on two islands. ==Later life and death==