New Zealand Held a Bird Contest. A Bat Won. – The New York Times

Posted: November 5, 2021 at 10:09 pm

AUCKLAND, New Zealand The candidates didnt know they were running. The winner received no prize. And, at least by appearance, the champion appeared to be ineligible to compete.

The race was for New Zealands Bird of the Year, an annual competition that gives New Zealanders an opportunity to rank their favorite birds from the countrys 200-odd native species and raises awareness of their ecological plight.

But this year, a long-tailed bat, one of New Zealands two native land mammals, flew away with the top prize, contest organizers said on Monday.

The audacity of the bat, known as pekapeka-tou-roa, led some on social media to call the competition a farce and rail about a stolen election. But other voters applauded the victory.

Real steal yo girl/take yo job energy, said one Aucklander in a post on Twitter.

Another user saw the upset as a potential source of inspiration, writing: If pekapeka tou roa can win Bird of the Year despite not being a bird then you can ask out your crush, anything is possible.

Bird of the Year, a two-week campaign run by the conservation charity Forest and Bird, is conducted like New Zealands electoral system through an instant-runoff system. The competition has a long history of ballot stuffing, rigged polls and even rumors of Russian interference. Last year, a hacker slipped more than 1,500 fake votes into an election database, sending one flightless bird to the top.

But this years result was the subject of no such skulduggery, organizers said. They had included New Zealands two native bat species among the avian contenders for the first time to help raise awareness.

Laura Keown, a spokeswoman for the contest, said: Because of New Zealands lack of mammals, Bat of the Year was going to be a very boring competition. It just felt like a nice opportunity to highlight this critically endangered native species and bring them from the darkness into the light.

The countrys two bat species face many of the same difficulties as more famous creatures such as the kiwi, which won the bird competition in 2009. The land mammals are at risk from pests like rats, cats and possums, as well as from the destruction of their forest habitats and climate change. The population is declining by about 5 percent a year.

For a long time, a bat led the bird contest by quite a lot, Ms. Keown told reporters last week. The lesser short-tailed bat was the only other contender giving the long-tailed bat a run for its money with voters. Behind them was a kakapo a large, flightless parrot which was last years champion.

Perhaps drawn by the lure of the cute, fuzzy faces of New Zealands native bats, nearly 57,000 voters around the world weighed in for this years online competition the most in the contests 16-year history.

I like to think that its because Kiwis just love their native bat so much, and they just really reveled in this chance to get to vote for the bat especially for New Zealands highest honor, the Bird of the Year, Ms. Keown said.

Most New Zealanders have never seen the shy, nocturnal mammal, which is roughly the length of a thumb and able to flit from tree to tree at top speeds of more than 35 miles an hour.

They dont really interact with people at all, said Kerry Borkin, a bat ecologist at New Zealands Department of Conservation. Because of that, theres so much that were still learning about bats, which actually makes them really exciting.

Once bats have been pushed out of an area, it is exceptionally difficult to bring them back, Dr. Borkin said. We need to keep those trees that we have already and plant more so that there are more in the future for the bats to use.

Ms. Keown could not confirm whether bats would make another appearance in next years competition.

Bird of the Year is no stranger to controversy, Ill say that, said Ms. Keown. We always ruffle some feathers.

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New Zealand Held a Bird Contest. A Bat Won. - The New York Times

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