The Kiwi bird is a eukaryotic organism. The Kiwi is multicellular, and prokaryotic cells can only be unicellular life forms. The animal cells that make up a kiwi bird must be eukaryotic otherwise they wouldn't be animal cells. Prokaryotic cells are bacteria or archea, which would mean the kiwi is not prokaryotic.
Abiotic factors: Restricted distribution: The kiwi bird lives in a small restricted area, which is mainly New Zealand. This can lead to inbreeding, which can cause negative traits and disease to occur in Kiwi birds.
Biotic factors: deforestation: People in New Zealand want more land for crops and space, which leads to disruption and destroying of the Kiwi's habitat. Introduced predators: Dogs, Cats, and ferrets, are large predators towards the Kiwi bird and are the reason for it's 10% survival rate.