Contents
Ngā rārangi take
- COVER_SECTIONCover Section
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- CHAPTERRe-opening the Forest Debates
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- TITLE_SECTIONTitle Section
- TABLE_OF_CONTENTSCONTENTS
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- CHAPTERCONSERVATION UPDATE
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- CHAPTERThe bellbird's return
- CHAPTERNew deal for Campbell Island Teal
- CHAPTERThe Chathams — bird update
- CHAPTERCONSERVATION UPDATE
- CHAPTERForest and Bird's new corporate membership
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- CHAPTER"We must be close to civilisation..."
- CHAPTERA saline oasis
- CHAPTERGodwits in the firing line
- CHAPTERGoing green with Glaxo
- CHAPTERA pied shag duet
- CHAPTERForest and Bird HQ moves house
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- CHAPTERForest and Bird's new corporate membership
- CHAPTERKNOW YOUR WEEDS
- CHAPTERWater net
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- CHAPTERWORLD WATCH
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- CHAPTERHandy hemp
- CHAPTERLongline losses
- CHAPTERCar growth defeats emission controls
- CHAPTERBIRDS INTERNATIONAL
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- CHAPTERBirds engulfed by oil
- CHAPTERParrot rediscovered
- CHAPTERConserving Pitta's last forest
- CHAPTERSaving the Sisserou
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- CHAPTERBRANCHING OUT........
- CHAPTERMotuora Island — a future open sanctuary
- CHAPTERCanterbury focuses on birds
- CHAPTERHinewai reserve blossoms
- CHAPTERPossum hunt
- CHAPTERNew section and Kiwi Conservation Clubs
- CHAPTERUrban chainsaw silenced
- ILLUSTRATIONPhoto: NZ Herald
- CHAPTERFlying for conservation
- CHAPTERMount Ruapehu natural history week
- CHAPTERMoonlighting with weka
- CHAPTERAlbatross in trouble
- ILLUSTRATIONSandy Bartle, curator of birds at the National Museum, with a white-capped albatross killed in the Auckland Islands s...
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- ILLUSTRATIONA pair of white-capped albatrosses, the most common victim of the squid trawlers. Photo: Kim Westerskov.
- ILLUSTRATIONA gruesome death for two albatrosses wrapped around the netsonde monitor cable.
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- ILLUSTRATIONPart Of a fleet of 43 jigging and trawling boats working between the New Zealand mainland and Campbell Island Photo: ...
- ILLUSTRATIONAbove: Industry claims that jiggers are too small to work around the Auckland Islands do not stack up. These two Japa...
- ILLUSTRATIONCentre left: About 100 Hooker's sea lions are drowned each year by squid trawlers around the Auckland Islands. Photo:...
- ILLUSTRATIONLeft: Squid pounce on these lures and are snagged by the rows of unbarbed hooks. Photo: Alan Tennyson
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- CHAPTERLearning fo grow up green
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- ILLUSTRATIONPupils from Salford School in Invercargill race back to class after finishing some hands-on conservation work when th...
- ILLUSTRATIONKate Graeme, her sister Meg and David Holland carried out a four-week survey of the Coromandel over summer to assess ...
- ILLUSTRATIONCashmere High School pupils recently declared their school a "tropical timber-free zone." Christchurch Mayor Vicki Bu...
- ILLUSTRATIONJanet Turney and Angela Palmer delivering their rainforest talk to 6th and 7th form pupils at Linwood High School, Ch...
- CHAPTERBut what can we do?
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
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- CHAPTERTUATAPERE'S WILD CHALLENGE
- ILLUSTRATIONCompetitors on Lake Hauroko race towards the outlet to the Wairaurahiri River. Photo: Tim Higham.
- ILLUSTRATIONLeft: Tuatapere promotions group chairman Alec Miller (left) discusses planning for the Wild Challenge race with Depa...
- ILLUSTRATIONWomen almost stole the honours in the inaugural Wild Challenge race. Second and third placegetters Penny Webster (lef...
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- ILLUSTRATIONOne of the spectacular wooden viaducts which takes trampers along the south coast tramping track between Te Waewae Ba...
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- CHAPTERTony Gray — The bellbird's barrister
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- CHAPTERFarmer fears
- ILLUSTRATIONBrian and Robyn Barnes
- CHAPTERThe marvel of migration
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- ILLUSTRATIONLeft: The far eastern curlew’s beak is ideal for probing in the mud or sand, winkling out most worms and crabs. Durin...
- ILLUSTRATIONBelow: At the most no more than 200 sharp-tailed sandpipers come to New Zealand a year from their northeastern Siberi...
- ILLUSTRATIONBottom: The Pacific golden plover breeds in northern and north-eastern Siberia and Alaska and migrates to numerous co...
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- ILLUSTRATIONAn uncommon migratory bird in New Zealand, the marsh sandpiper is most often seen in the company of pied stilts.
- ILLUSTRATIONLeft: One of the species affected by the Gulf oil spill is the terek sandpiper. Ever on the move when feeding, this s...
- ILLUSTRATIONFar left: Arriving in New Zealand in September from Siberia and Alaska, the red-necked stint is a diminutive bird whi...
- ILLUSTRATIONDawn over Miranda, the Firth of Thames. One of New Zealand's most important areas for migratory birds, the 8,500 ha o...
- ILLUSTRATION1 Long-billed Curlew 2 Eastern Bartailed Godwit 3 Knot 4 Pacific Golden Plover 5 Broadbilled Sandpiper 6 Curlew Sandp...
- ILLUSTRATIONThe Caspian tern — easily identified by its bright red beak — is one of the world's most widespread coastal birds, oc...
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- ILLUSTRATIONStriking identical poses, a white-fronted tern and chick are pictured at Sulphur Point near Tauranga, while an adult ...
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- ILLUSTRATIONFar left: The tables are turned on a wrybill as a cockle attaches itself to its toe. The endemic wrybill is best know...
- CHAPTERTHE PENAN SPEAKING FOR THE RAINFOREST
- ILLUSTRATION"After a single night's rain, look at the chocolate brown rivers in your locality and remember that they are carrying...
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- ILLUSTRATIONThe banks of the Baram River are lined for kilometres with stacked logs awaiting export. Photo: Grant Rosoman
- ILLUSTRATIONFarewell to Sarawak's rainforests: yet another raft of logs disappears into a Baram River sunset. Photo: Grant Rosoman
- ILLUSTRATIONBefore logging, rivers such as the Tutoh River in the Upper Baram ran clean, according to the Penan. Photo: Grant Ros...
- ILLUSTRATIONFrozen in daylight, this Wagnal's pit viper could be mistaken for a branch. Photo: Grant Rosoman
- CHAPTERITTO report a whitewash
- CHAPTERPROTECTING AN ICON
- ILLUSTRATIONThe view (from Queenstown) most people have of the national icon that is the Remarkables. Photo: Barney Brewster
- ILLUSTRATIONRanunculus buchananii, one of the most spectacular alpine buttercups, which reaches its eastern limits on the Remarka...
- ILLUSTRATIONDouble Cone (2,324 metres), highest point on the Remarkables Range, viewed from the south in upper Wye Creek — specta...
- ILLUSTRATIONParahebe birleyi, a remarkable high-alpine plant with perhaps the highest overall elevation of any New Zealand alpine...
- ILLUSTRATIONLeft: Senecio lyallii in the Rastus Burn. Photo: Neill Simpson
- ILLUSTRATIONTop: The male Hepialid moth, Aoraia senex, frequents high alpine snowbanks where it emerges and flies by day in Febru...
- ILLUSTRATIONBottom: Seen here in the act of mating, the colourful male tiger moth Metacrias huttoni has located the nest of the f...
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- ILLUSTRATIONUp to 25 mm long, the large weevil Lyperobius spedeni is found on various plants of the carrot family in the high-alp...
- ILLUSTRATIONNow only found on dry, sheltered cliffs or overhangs because it has largely been eaten out by stock, the rare native ...
- ILLUSTRATIONAnisotome capillifolia (right), Myosotis elderi (below left) and Celmisia verbascifolia (below right). The Remarkable...
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- CHAPTERRemarkable recognition
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- CHAPTERWar on Wallabies
- ILLUSTRATIONThe largest wallaby in New Zealand is Bennett’s. This species is well established in South Canterbury's Hunters Hills...
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- ILLUSTRATIONLeft: Erected in 1984 by the Forest Service, this combined exclosure for wallabies, deer and possums in the Okataing ...
- ILLUSTRATIONRight: This low structure excludes wallabies (not deer or possums). The photo shows regrowth of mahoe. five-finger, h...
- ILLUSTRATIONKawau Island is the only New Zealand home of the swamp wallaby, whose preferred habitat is the kanuka forest at the n...
- CHAPTERThe Parma wallaby
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- CHAPTERECO-LABELLING
- CHAPTERThe overseas experience
- CHAPTERAdvertising code
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- CHAPTERBULLETIN
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- CHAPTERROYAL FOREST & BIRD PROTECTION SOCIETY OF NEW ZEALAND INC.
- CHAPTERSOCIETY'S LODGES AND HOUSES
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