New Zealand has a long-standing manmade cryptid mystery.
A group of North American moose (Alces alces), ten in number, were released in 1910 in New Zealand. They are said to still roams parts of Fiordland. Until this week, the last confirmed contact with moose was in 1952, when one was shot. But people say they are present today, despite skeptical claims otherwise.
Ken Tustin and his wife Margie, late in 2008 and early in 2009, installed a dozen digital cameras in the bush between Wet Jacket Arm and Dusky Sound. Tustin guesstimates that a population of 20 moose could be living in the area in 2010, and he’s been trying to capture one on film.
Did he succeed recently?
Is this new trailcam photo proof?
It could be a young moose, at least from my first hand experiences of seeing nearly a hundred different moose of all ages in the wild, in Maine and elsewhere in New England. ~ Loren Coleman, Director, International Cryptozoology Museum, Portland, Maine.
Technically moose (called elk in Europe) are deer, but when we are talking “moose” (above) versus “deer” (below), people are comparing two rather different groups of animals, of course.
Ken Tustin is careful. He said last mid-week, when the news started circulating: “Between email and telephone calls, I’ve had about 30 people contact me. About a third say ‘Congratulations, you’ve got a moose’, and the other two-thirds say ‘Look, I don’t know. It’s probably a deer, but look at that muzzle’.”
+++++
Is it a moose? Is it a deer? Or is it an extremely lost miniature pony?
Veteran Otago moose-hunter Ken Tustin thinks he may have snapped a photograph of a juvenile moose in southwestern Fiordland.
The hulking animals have not been officially spotted in New Zealand for more than 50 years.
Mr Tustin, who first started tracking moose in the 1970s, said the photograph was taken by one of 13 cameras he had set up surrounded by triggers.
It was shot on March 7 in an area known as Herrick Creek, but was retrieved only a few days ago, Mr Tustin said.
When he viewed the images, he waded through thousands that showed only deer.
“But there was one photo that was strikingly different and it had me sitting back with my hair on end.”
The first sign it was different was the “horse-shaped face”, which contrasted with the dog-shaped face of a deer, he said.
However, the photo showed a broader neck than he would expect from a moose, and he suspected it might actually be a deer, he said.
“I think this will always be a ‘maybe’.”
It could not be a half-moose, half-deer because the two species did not interbreed, he said.
Most people regarded the last official sighting of a moose to have been from 1952, but he had documented more sightings since then, he said.
DNA testing on hair follicles found in 2001 and 2002 had proven to be from a moose, he said. He estimated a population of 20 moose could be wandering around the area – though that was a “total guess”.
– Southland Times, May 26, 2010, New Zealand.
Ken Tustin checks a remote digital camera installed near Herrick Creek, Wet Jacket Arm, Fiordland, to detect moose. Photo by Marg Tustin.
Not to say it is related, but this is a milestone anniversary of the release of the moose, and a new book just came out.
A (Nearly) Complete History of the Moose in New Zealand by Ken Tustin has the unfortunate publishing date of April 1st, 2010, from Halcyon Press.
Tustin’s earlier book, A Wild Moose Chase, appeared in 1998.
One hundred years on and moose in Fiordland live on – well, according to a South Otago-based moose hunter anyway.
Ken Tustin, of Bull Creek, near Milton, is celebrating the 100- year anniversary of the release of moose in Fiordland today with a book that details evidence of moose from the area.
The book, A (nearly) complete history of the moose in New Zealand, details encounters with moose in the fiords and the many sightings of the animal by hunters, trampers, fishermen and lighthouse keepers.
The biologist had been collecting evidence and stories of moose in New Zealand for about 40 years and the book offered photo and DNA evidence from as recently as 15 years ago, he said.
“It was generally thought that the animals were extinct in the mid-30s but in the early 50s there were a number of individuals that shot and photographed the moose.
“So what it has is stories of people’s sighting or shooting or someone that has seen a skeleton of the moose as proof,” he said.
The stories about moose sightings, of which 60 were post-1960, had taken years to put together after tracking people down and then confirming their moose encounter story with a second source, Tustin said. “This book is firstly about moose, but it is also about a social history as it says what each person was doing down in the sounds at the same time.”
The book will be in Southland book stores by April 15.
~ Southland Times, April 9, 2010, New Zealand.
Thanks for a heads up from Tony Lucas.
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