Contents
Ngā rārangi take
- COVER_SECTIONCover Section
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- CHAPTERConservation East and West
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- TITLE_SECTIONTitle Section
- TABLE_OF_CONTENTSCONTENTS
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- CHAPTERCONSERVATION UPDATE
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- CHAPTERDoes New Zealand Have Any Native Spiders?
- CHAPTERNatural Gas Controversy Flares Up
- CHAPTERSugar Loaf Islands — Marine Park Under Threat
- ILLUSTRATIONTypical of the Sugar Loafs, the blue-eyed triple fin is not found in such numbers elsewhere. Photo: Dave Maddocks
- ILLUSTRATIONThe marine park is a popular attraction for divers. Photo: Barry Hartley
- ILLUSTRATIONOver the last few years fur seals have finally returned to the Sugar Loafs, after many years absence and following ea...
- CHAPTERNew Geological Guidebook Series
- ILLUSTRATIONHoneycombe Rock/Glenburn Coast. Lloyd Homer
- CHAPTERFascinating Facts About Native Bats
- CHAPTERWORLD WATCH
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- CHAPTERElephants and Ivory
- CHAPTERPrivatising Nature Reserves
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- CHAPTERBULLETIN
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- CHAPTERAnnual General Meeting
- CHAPTERObituary
- CHAPTERTony Burgess (1946-1989)
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- CHAPTERTony Burgess (1946-1989)
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- CHAPTERThe greening of a FOREST GIANT
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- ILLUSTRATIONThe protection of Tasman's Gammons Block by sale to the Department of Conservation will safeguard the forest homes of...
- ILLUSTRATIONTasman's 2050 hectare Aratika Reserve on the shores of Lake Brunner in Westland, looking south to Mt Te Kinga. This p...
- ILLUSTRATIONAccord signatories, from left, David Crawford (Federated Mountain Clubs), Gerry McSweeney (RF&BPS), Bryce Heard (Tasm...
- ILLUSTRATIONMap of Tasman Reserves TOTAL 41329Ha
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- CHAPTERNEW ZEALAND CONSERVATION CORPS
- ILLUSTRATIONTop: Tim Harcourt feeding kaka on Kapiti Island. The Corps stay on Kapiti for one week per month working on a new tra...
- ILLUSTRATIONLeft: Airlift! — bringing materials across to Kapiti Island for track and tieKe roosting and nesting box and takahe p...
- ILLUSTRATIONRignt: Left to right: Rachel McKay, Paul Kayes and Tim Harcourt building a track on the north side of Pauatahanui Res...
- CHAPTERA recipe for success
- CHAPTERSouth Otago — Positive Work for the Environment
- ILLUSTRATIONLeft: At Jack’s Bay Blowhole in the Catlins, NZCC members have been tending native plants which will be used by yello...
- ILLUSTRATIONRight: Southland's Conservation Corps, left to right: Karin Stroud, Glen Aspinall, Mark Thomson, Cathleen Clark, Mark...
- ILLUSTRATIONClearing gorse from around a track at the Pauatahanui Wildlife Reserve, an effort much appreciated by Forest and Bird...
- ILLUSTRATIONLOCATION OF NEW ZEALAND CONSERVATION CORPS PILOTS
- CHAPTERSetting Up and Running A Conservation Corps Project
- CHAPTERA Personal View
- CHAPTERA COLD HARD LOOK
- ILLUSTRATIONThe Antarctic and humankind: have we the foresight to leave this fragile part of the world relatively undisturbed? ph...
- ILLUSTRATIONPaint flaking off a building at the Soviet base of Bellingshausen — bad news for sensitive lichens. Photo: Alan Hemmings
- ILLUSTRATIONTit for tat diplomacy: Chilean and Soviet bases adjacent to each other on King George Island. The area they are built...
- ILLUSTRATIONTop: Beauty on ice: although Antarctica can be unforgiving to humans, we ultimately pose a much greater threat to the...
- ILLUSTRATIONBottom: Despite a convention to protect seals, Crabeater seals are still killed to feed dogs in Antarctica and for so...
- ILLUSTRATIONBottom: For this Weddell seal and her pup, born in the depths of the winter, the problems lie not with the rigours of...
- ILLUSTRATIONTop: Garbage at McMurdo. There is no reason why waste cannot be removed from Antarctica, but countries are unwilling ...
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- ILLUSTRATIONLeft: This female Antarctic fur seal and pup are part of a population only now recovering from the near extermination...
- ILLUSTRATIONBelow: With a six foot wingspan, the southern giant petrel has no natural enemies, but human disturbance around a num...
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- CHAPTERSAVING THE LANDFORMS AND ROCKS
- ILLUSTRATIONTwo of the three most spectacular examples of badlands' erosion in New Zealand have recently been given legal protect...
- ILLUSTRATIONMuriwai pillow lavas on the west coast of Auckland were threatened with complete removal in the early 1970s with the ...
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- ILLUSTRATIONThe 1886 eruption of basalt scoria and ash from this long rift down the centre of a number of rhyolite domes that for...
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- ILLUSTRATIONThe Castlepoint area on the east Wairarapa coast features some spectacular coastal landforms composed of geologically...
- ILLUSTRATIONThese 8000-year-old tree stumps poking out of the sea at the mouth of the Kaiwhata River on the Wairarapa coast provi...
- CHAPTERRed Rocks, Wellington
- CHAPTERGeothermal Areas and Whakarewarewa
- CHAPTERWiri Lava Cave, Auckland
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- CHAPTERMinding the New Zealand Dotterel's business
- ILLUSTRATIONNew Zealand dotterel chick and egg
- ILLUSTRATIONVariable oystercatcher
- ILLUSTRATIONWhite fronted tern Illustrations: Helen Harrison
- ILLUSTRATIONBanded dotterel
- ILLUSTRATIONNew Zealand dotterel eggs
- ILLUSTRATIONA two-week-old New Zealand dotterel taking its first shaky steps into the world. Thanks to our warden project the fut...
- ILLUSTRATIONNew Zealand dotterel
- ILLUSTRATIONGodwit
- ILLUSTRATIONWhite fronted tern
- ILLUSTRATIONCamouflaged eggs are one of the dotterel's few defences against a host of problems: dogs, stoats, trail bikes and gen...
- ILLUSTRATIONA distraction display by an adult dotterel in an attempt to lure an intruder away from the nest. Photo: Brian Chudleigh.
- ILLUSTRATIONHelen and Adrian Harrison with their bird resting sign at the Ohope Spit.
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- CHAPTERTHE SECRET LIFE OF THE
- CHAPTERShining Cuckoo
- ILLUSTRATIONThe shining cuckoo's egg (right) is quite different to its host's, the grey warbler (left), yet the warbler appears n...
- ILLUSTRATIONA 10-day-old cuckoo (left) and a 15-day-old-cuckoo (right). By this stage it is old enough to kick its host's chicks ...
- ILLUSTRATIONPhoto: Brian Gill. Opposite: Despite its striking coloration. the shining cuckoo is seldom seen in the forest. Nevert...
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- ILLUSTRATIONDistribution and possible migration routes (1-4) of the shining cuckoo. The range in Australia and New Zealand is sho...
- CHAPTERShining Cuckoo
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- CHAPTERFOREST & BIRD INTERVIEW
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- CHAPTERFORUM
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- CHAPTERROYAL FOREST & BIRD PROTECTION SOCIETY OF NEW ZEALAND INC.
- CHAPTERSOCIETY'S LODGES AND HOUSES
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