Classroom lesson 路 Wildlife馃嚦馃嚳 New Zealand

The kea - the world's only mountain parrot

A clever, cheeky bird that will untie your shoelaces if you let it

A kea parrot with green and orange plumage standing on a rock in the mountains

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The kea is a large, olive-green parrot that lives high up in the cold mountains of New Zealand's South Island. It is the only parrot in the world that has chosen to live up where it snows. Keas are famous for two things: being unbelievably clever, and being unbelievably cheeky.

Tell me more

Most parrots like jungles and palm trees. The kea decided to do the opposite. They live above the tree line, where the air is thin and there's snow for half the year. Their bright orange under-feathers flash like fire when they fly past a snowy peak.

Keas are about as smart as a three-year-old child. Scientists have set them puzzles - levers to pull, boxes to open, sticks to use as tools - and keas figure them out remarkably fast. They also remember solutions for years and teach them to their friends.

They are also terrible thieves. Hikers and skiers have to put away anything shiny, soft or pull-able before a kea finds it. Keas have been known to peel the rubber off car windscreen wipers, unzip backpacks, untie shoelaces, and run off with sunglasses. Not because they're hungry - they just want to know what happens.

Despite all the mischief, keas are clearly happy when they are with other keas. They play with each other for hours, throwing things, somersaulting, chasing each other through the air. Scientists who study them call this kind of play 'mountain clown behaviour' - they really do seem to be having fun.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01What does it mean for an animal to be 'clever'? How can we tell?
  2. 02Keas play a lot. Why might playing be useful for an animal as well as a person?
  3. 03Why might a smart, curious bird be a problem for hikers? Can you think of other animals that get into trouble for being too clever?
Try this

Classroom activity

Set a class 'kea puzzle': hide a treat (or sticker) inside a series of small obstacles - lift a cup, undo a clip, open a box. Time how long different pairs take to solve it. Discuss what made it tricky. A kea would probably beat you.