Contents
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- COVER_SECTIONCover Section
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- TITLE_SECTIONTitle Section
- TABLE_OF_CONTENTSCONTENTS
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- CHAPTERThe Other Side of Green
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- CHAPTERCONSERVATION UPDATE
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- CHAPTERLobster on the rocks
- CHAPTERA decade of restoration
- CHAPTERIn defence of sharks
- CHAPTERConservation holidays — any volunteers?
- CHAPTERKokako in Northland
- CHAPTERKakerori starting to recover
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- CHAPTERKNOW YOUR WEEDS
- CHAPTERWandering Jew
- ILLUSTRATIONWandering Jew
- CHAPTERWandering Jew
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- CHAPTERWORLD WATCH
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- CHAPTERCFCs phase out
- CHAPTERBad for business
- CHAPTERGreat White sharks — How rare?
- CHAPTERFavourite feline foods
- CHAPTERBooks Received
- CHAPTERBRANCHING OUT
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- CHAPTERMatakohe Island Reserve
- CHAPTERForest & Bird Festival
- CHAPTER1990 Trees for 1990
- CHAPTERFencing for Kokako
- CHAPTERManawatu nature trail
- CHAPTERKA IKOURA, NATURE TOURISM TOWN
- ILLUSTRATIONAt Kaikoura people have swapped harpoons for cameras in the modern hunt for whales.
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- ILLUSTRATIONSperm whales dive deepest of all whales. They have been found entangled in submarine cables at depths of 1000m and mo...
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- ILLUSTRATIONAbove: The local iwi Ngati Kuri has taken on a new lease of life thanks to the advent of whale watching. Guide Lorrai...
- ILLUSTRATIONThe world' smallest marine dolphin is native to New Zealand coastal waters. Hector's dolphins are commonly sighted ar...
- ILLUSTRATIONThe attractions of whale watching trips are not confined to whales: the waters around Kaikoura are rich with bird lif...
- ILLUSTRATIONand Buller's mollymawk (bottom). Photos: Craig Potton
- ILLUSTRATIONOpposite: The Kaikoura Peninsula from the air: "a natural area for a marine reserve." Photo: Craig Potton
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- ILLUSTRATIONMost spectacular and abundant of the dolphins around the Kaikoura coast is the dusky. Photo: Craig Potton
- ILLUSTRATIONKaikoura, a town of surprises. The leopard seal in the background would be classed as a "vagrant individual" by marin...
- ILLUSTRATIONIf whale numbers continue to plummet as they have in the last 100 years, these whalebone relics may be all that futur...
- CHAPTERKeeping an eye on human sharks
- CHAPTERKaikoura Marine Reserve — "Much in little"
- CHAPTER"The chimney is on fire"
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
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- CHAPTERTHE TORLESSE RANGE
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- ILLUSTRATIONHardy alpine plants cling tenaciously to the shattered rock ridges. Vegetable sheep (Raoulia eximia), native broom (C...
- ILLUSTRATIONThe light green and red of the scree willowherb (Epilobium pycnostachyum) brightens the grey scree slope. Photo: Mike...
- ILLUSTRATIONMerging into the rock are the cryptic black flowers of the scree cotula (Leptinella atrata). photo: Mike Harding
- ILLUSTRATIONConfined to these dry screes, the curious penwiper (Notothlaspi rosulatum) signals its presence with conspicuous whit...
- ILLUSTRATIONThese dry beech forests in the north-east of the Torlesse Range are all that remain of extensive stands which once cl...
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- ILLUSTRATIONWhere winter snow insulates the ground from extremes of temperature, hardy snow tussocks (Chionochloa macra) and moun...
- ILLUSTRATIONRight: Trampers traverse the broken ridge to the Gap. Only an hour's drive from Christchurch, the Torlesse Range is a...
- CHAPTERThe Torlesse Range — A Natural Museum
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- CHAPTERSeabirds in Strife
- ILLUSTRATIONA drowned wandering albatross with a longline hook in its bill. pnoto: Nigel Brothers.
- ILLUSTRATIONA Japanese longline boat off Tasinania (June 1988). Photo: Nigel Brothers
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- ILLUSTRATIONPole at stern of longline boat. Streamers from this pole scare birds away and can reduce bait loss to birds by 69 per...
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- ILLUSTRATIONBackground: A Buller's mollymawk follows a fishing boat off the Snares. For those following longline boats, the attra...
- ILLUSTRATIONThe stern of a Soviet trawler. Many birds are killed when they hit a wire during trawler operations. Photo: Alan Tenn...
- ILLUSTRATIONVictims of the tuna longline fishery off Tasmania, including: black-browed and white-capped mollymawks, a wandering a...
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- ILLUSTRATIONThis adult white-capped mollymawk on its nest at Disappointment Island (February 1988) has an estimated one in twelve...
- ILLUSTRATIONWandering albatrosses, the world's largest seabirds, displaying on Campbell Island (January 1987). Worldwide declines...
- ILLUSTRATIONBluefin tuna — the target species of longlining boats — being cleaned. Bluefin tuna can grow up to 250 kilograms and ...
- ILLUSTRATIONNZ black-browed mollymawk and chick (December 1984) — large numbers drown on longlines in the East Cape ared. Photo: ...
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- ILLUSTRATIONBuller's mollymawk on the Snares Islands. This is one of the most commonly drowned species on longlines in New Zealan...
- ILLUSTRATIONThe sooty shearwater our southern muttonbird,a comes ashore in the evening on islands like the Snares, At least half ...
- CHAPTERWhite-Capped Mollymawk
- CHAPTERNZ Black-browed Mollymawk
- CHAPTERBuller's Mollymawk
- CHAPTERSooty Shearwater
- CHAPTERSave the Seabirds
- ILLUSTRATIONSave the Seabirds
- CHAPTERA Winter's Tale
- ILLUSTRATIONEven in the middle of a windswept winter, Stephens Island in Cook Strait teems with curious and eye-catching wildlife...
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- CHAPTEREROSION ZONE
- CHAPTERLand classification systems
- CHAPTERLand erosion — a marine disaster
- CHAPTERPROFILE
- CHAPTERChathams Heritage Programme Takes Off
- ILLUSTRATIONLong time Forest and Bird member Stan Hemsley returned to the Chathams for the first time in 40 years to help with th...
- ILLUSTRATIONMoriori tree carving, Hapupu National Reserve. Photo: Mark Bellingham
- ILLUSTRATIONDriving posts — the hard way! Photo: Mike Harding
- ILLUSTRATIONWellington Conservation Corps members and the bust of Tommy Solomon, the last full blooded Moriori. Photo: Mike Harding
- ILLUSTRATIONFive years after Forest and Bird helped fence the Hapupu Reserve, the regeneration is evident (left).
- ILLUSTRATIONSuch protective measures are desperately needed in areas such as the Ocean Mail Reserve (right) which was fenced this...
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- CHAPTERBULLETIN
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- CHAPTERNational Kea and Kaka Databases
- CHAPTERThe Green Paper Chase
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- CHAPTERSubject & Author Index Vol. 21 No. 1-4
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- CHAPTERROYAL FOREST & BIRD PROTECTION SOCIETY OF NEW ZEALAND INC.
- CHAPTERSOCIETY'S LODGES AND HOUSES
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