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COVID-19 LOCKDOWN LEADS TO INVASION BY FERAL CHICKENS IN AUCKLAND

  • Jun 11, 2020
  • 1 min read

Titirangi, a suburb of Auckland in New Zealand, has emerged from the country’s coronavirus lockdown to find it has been invaded by feral chickens, Colin Drury wrote for the Independent on June 10, 2020.


Around 30 of the birds have made a home of Titirangi while its 4,000 residents were staying in during the COVID-19 crisis. Now, locals are demanding action against the birds – which they say are damaging the area and leaving their human neighbors sleep-deprived with their early morning chorus. “Some people really hate them,” said Greg Presland chair of the Waitākere Ranges community board, which has been tasked with addressing the problem.

It is, it should be said, not an entirely new issue. A population of some 250 feral chickens had developed in Titirangi up to 2019 after a pair of domestic birds are said to have been released and “gone rogue” a decade earlier. But after local authorities managed to round all but two of the creatures and send them to nearby farms before the COVID-19 outbreak, residents assumed the problem had been sorted.

Not so, it seems. The chickens have now multiplied once again during the weeks of reduced human activity. “It’s reignited old divisions in the village,” Presland told The Guardian, adding that some residents had previously left food for the chickens which in turn had attracted an explosion of the rat population. Now, he added, efforts to capture the birds will be redoubled, although some exasperated locals have suggested they should employ a local frozen chicken company to sort the problem once and for all. “The thought’s actually starting to appeal,” Mr Presland joked.

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