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Atiu




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Atiu from Space


Atiu as seen from the Space Shuttle
info about this image
click image to see enlargement


visit the NASA site below for More Cook Islands

http://nix.nasa.gov



ATIU = (old name) Enuamanu "land of birds", in the Southern group of the Cook Islands, is one of a group of three islands 135 miles east-northeast of Rarotonga known to the native Cook islanders as 'NGA-PU-TORU' (the three roots), the other 2 islands being Mauke and Mitiaro.

31/Mar/1777 Atiu and Takutea in the Cook Islands discovered by Captain James Cook.


The three volcanic peaks form a triangle with Atiu having the least coral reef and some very interesting rock formations. Makatea is the Maori name for the fossilised prehistoric coral that surrounds the island. Over 1,000's of years bird droppings and plants have grown over the surface in sections and hence many caves, five quite unusual.

Captain Cook came ashore on Atiu at Orovaru Beach on April 3, 1777. Atiu's has five villages on the flat island center, which leaves the coastline unpopulated. There is also a coffee plantation, and a vanilla bean plantation. Captain Cook visited the island 1777 and served a ceremonial brew called 'KAVA' honoring his arrival in the islands. It is made from the root of a pepper tree called PIPER METHYSICUM. Cook took samples of the root back to England where it has been used to treat stress, anxiety and insomnia.

Atiu is home to the Kopeka (swiftlet) bird which is rare to this place...the bird never lands except to lay eggs.

The 'TUMUNU', the bush-beer tradition, was introduced by natives from Tahiti and was concocted by hollowing out the stump of a coconut tree, filling it with oranges and pawpaw and yeast, mashing into a pulp and let it ferment for about a week. The beer was deemed 'illegal' (as was dancing) by the missionaries. The natives would cover their caches with branches from nearby bushes.

There are daily flights to and from Rarotonga and accommodations on the island.


Meitaki Ranunui


Atiu Kingfisher
Halcyon tuta atiu
sub species of the Pacific Kingfisher


Atiu Kingfisher



The Mangaia and Atiu kingfishers are both sub species of the Pacific Kingfisher and can be found on many islands in the South East Pacific: Society, Cook and Gambier Islands.

See other Atiu & KiaOrana.com pages for more pictures of kingfishers & other birds.


Tahiti Swiftlet
Tahiti Swiftlet

Kopeka is a local name for the Atiu Swiftlet.


The Atiu Swiftlet and the Tahiti Swiftlet are almost identical and can only be told apart in the field only when you have both species in your hand at the same time. Then you can see the slight difference between the 2 species.

This image and information provided by:

Rob Abraham

Click Here to see more from Rob about Birds, BankNotes and Bird Stamps.

Scan from the book:
Birds of Hawaii and the Tropical Pacific

More info about Cook Islands Birds
see
BOOKs pages



Information from the
Cook Islands Biodiversity Database:

BIODIVERSITY: Globally endangered (seriously). Comment: Nests in two caves: Ana Takitaki and Ana Tupurangi. Total nests: 190 (1987), 172 (1994) and 175 (1995). Population is small but relatively stable. In 1987 the 190 nests had 380 eggs and gave 114 fledglings - ie. 30% of the eggs produced a fledgling. 36% of the eggs disappeared, presumably victims of landcrab predation. Nest success was relatively low compared to other swiftlets.

POSITIVE SIGNIFICANCE: Ecotourism. Comments: Visiting the one of the breeding caves is an important visitor experience.

GENERAL NOTE: Atiu Swiftlets nest and roost in completely dark parts of caves. During the non-breeding season they typically leave in the morning between 6-7.30am and return in the evening between 6-7pm. During the breeding season they return about 6 times to feed their young. Outside the cave they never land. They use their excellent vision to catch flying insects over open areas and near trees. In the caves the birds echo locate using a series of audible clicks, which increase in frequency as they approach objects. The clicks have a single pulse of 2-3 milliseconds duration. When they land the call clicks are lengthened and this may act as a warning announcement. Takitaki is an imitation of the sound of the swiftlet; and 'ana" means 'cave'. The most closely related swiftlets are the Tahiti Swiftlet (cliff-nesting and non-echo locating) and the Marquesas Swiftlet (cliff and cave-nesting, the latter echolocating). The White-rumped Swiftlet, eastward to Tonga, is cave-nesting and echo locating - having a two-pulse click. Swifts and swiftlets are fast fliers. The Needletailed Swift, possibly the fastest-flying bird in the world, can level flight at 170km/hr. The White-rumped Swiftlet of Tonga and Fiji accelerates up to 110km/hr as it enters its caves to avoid predation by Barn Owls.


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