The Kakapo Is A Heavyweight Parrot Seeking A Comeback
New Zealand’s flightless, nocturnal parrot smells like an antique violin and relies on a booming voice to find a mate in the dense forest.

The kakapo is the only parrot in the world that has completely abandoned the sky. Weighing up to nine pounds, this moss-colored bird moves through the understory of New Zealand’s offshore islands with a slow, waddling grace. Evolution stripped away its flight muscles because, for millions of years, there were no land mammals to run from. Instead, the kakapo developed powerful legs for climbing the highest branches of yellow pine trees and a set of soft, specialized feathers that allow it to move in near-total silence through the night.
Its mating ritual is perhaps the most elaborate and exhausting in the avian world. Males excavate bowl-shaped 'leks' in the earth, which act as natural amplifiers for their low-frequency booming calls. These sounds can travel for miles across rugged terrain, signaling their location to females. However, the system is fragile; kakapos only breed every few years when the rimu tree produces a massive crop of fruit. This dependency on a specific nutritional trigger means the population, which once bottomed out at just 51 individuals, grows in fits and starts.
Because they cannot fly, kakapos have developed a unique chemical signature. They are often described as smelling intensely of honey, musk, and old wood—a scent so potent that it helped invasive predators like stoats track them to extinction on the mainland. Today, every surviving bird is fitted with a smart transmitter that monitors its health and diet. The species is no longer just a group of animals; it is a highly managed colony where every egg laid is a celebrated milestone.
Recovery teams now spend their nights in the bush, listening for the deep thrums that indicate the forest is still alive with the heaviest parrots on Earth.

