Cd. Millar et al., CAPTIVE MANAGEMENT AND MOLECULAR SEXING OF ENDANGERED AVIAN SPECIES -AN APPLICATION TO THE BLACK-STILT HIMANTOPUS-NOVAEZELANDIAE AND HYBRIDS, Biological Conservation, 82(1), 1997, pp. 81-86
The black stilt Himantopus novaezelandiae is one of the world's rarest
wading birds. There is at present a single population (approximately
70 birds) which comprises only 12 breeding pairs. Captive breeding and
rearing are important short-term treatments which can be used in effo
rts to rescue a species from extinction. Captive breeding programmes h
ave been developed and used for a number of New Zealand avian species,
including the black stilt. However, as with many bird species, sex as
signment in the black stilt is difficult. This difficulty has resulted
in captive management problems, which include the need to identify sa
me-sex pairs and the need to retain known-sex individuals as breeding
stock. We present here a DNA-based method which can be easily used to
sex both captive and wild black stilts. We describe how this method is
presently being used to assist in the captive rearing programme and d
iscuss the applications that this method may have for the conservation
of this bird in the wild. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd.