Contents
- COVER_SECTIONCover Section
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- TITLE_SECTIONTitle Section
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- TABLE_OF_CONTENTSTable Of Contents
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- CHAPTERcomment
- CHAPTERPutting conservation on the front bench
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- CHAPTERPutting conservation on the front bench
- CHAPTERmailbag
- CHAPTERMagpie troubles
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- CHAPTERSoft on cats?
- CHAPTERVanishing pukeko?
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- CHAPTERConservation director Kevin Smith responds:
- CHAPTERMagpie troubles
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- CHAPTERCONSERVATION briefs
- CHAPTERKakapo recovery plan renewed
- CHAPTERHitting the road
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- CHAPTERMice menace Antipodes fauna
- CHAPTERForest and Bird goes on-line
- CHAPTERCheltenham Beach rahui extended
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- ILLUSTRATIONThe tiles tell the story of Cheltenham and its tuangi using the actual data collected by locals. Each "chapter" descr...
- CHAPTERSouth Island kokako: from the impossible to the probable?
- ILLUSTRATIONBULLER'S BIRDS OF NEW ZEALAND, 1873
- CHAPTERTV as a conservation tool?
- CHAPTERWORLD watch
- CHAPTERChina syndrome
- CHAPTERSuccess in the Seychelles
- CHAPTERAlien travels
- CHAPTERProtecting the Arctic
- CHAPTERPaper income
- CHAPTERBRANCHING out
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- CHAPTERNORTH ISLAND KOKAKO
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- ILLUSTRATIONNow less common in many North Island forests: a kokako nest in 1992 after being attacked by a ship rat in Rotoehu For...
- ILLUSTRATIONIAN FLUX
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- ILLUSTRATIONThe 1,400-hectare Mapara Wildlife Reserve is often described as an "island of forest in a sea of pasture". Managing i...
- ILLUSTRATIONBrenda Greene (Auckland Regional Council), Brian McClure (Watercare; centre) and David Rodda (DoC) celebrate the arri...
- ILLUSTRATION"Freefall" was recovered from Mapara Wildlife Reserve after falling 32 metres from her nest. In this photo she shows ...
- ILLUSTRATIONTime-lapse video provides an unmistakable identification of night time predators at forest nests. The extraordinary d...
- ILLUSTRATIONSince 1990, Jeff Hudson (left) and Grant Jones – possumers turned kokako addicts ‒ have surveyed large areas of Te Ur...
- ILLUSTRATIONThe last Great Barrier Island kokako before its transfer to Little Barrier Island. The bird was farewelled by Ngati W...
- ILLUSTRATIONImprovements to bait station design have been a crucial part of increasing the effectiveness of ship rat and possum c...
- ILLUSTRATIONContract field worker Rachel Shorten ascends seven climbing ladders to see why a kokako nest failed at Rotoehu. Not e...
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- ILLUSTRATIONSuzanne Clegg and Phil Bradfield with one of more than 150 kokako banded at Mapara Wildlife Reserve in the past seven...
- ILLUSTRATIONSuzanne Clegg (DoC Te Kuiti) uses point height intercept equipment to determine how the forest vegetation is recoveri...
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- CHAPTERsight short high risk
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- ILLUSTRATIONMALCOLM FRANCIS
- ILLUSTRATIONPaul Barnes' anti-gut hooking appendage fitted to a standard commercial longline hook would save millions of rejected...
- ILLUSTRATIONSnapper. In October last year, the Minister of Fisheries tried to close part of the Hauraki Gulf to commercial snappe...
- ILLUSTRATIONDoug Kidd, a Minister of Fisheries who, despite an aggressive style and an initial antagonism towards conservationist...
- ILLUSTRATIONJapanese longliner in Wellington Harbour. Increasing technological sophistication has allowed fishers to continue to ...
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- CHAPTERCaves or Concrete?
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- ILLUSTRATIONA canopy of silver beech, treeferns, shrubs and tangles of fallen mossy trunks mask much of the underlying karst surf...
- ILLUSTRATIONJust inside the upper entrance to Bamboo Cave in Alpha Creek. Bamboo Cave contains two fossilised whale skeletons ove...
- ILLUSTRATIONA section of the Tiropahi (or Four Mile) Track. Following the line of an old bush tramway between a high limestone es...
- ILLUSTRATIONDelicate straws and stalactites coated with soft "moon milk" decorate many of the galleries in Name Later cave, a 600...
- ILLUSTRATIONNote: The name Alpha Creek has been used for over a decade to identify the creek that joins the Tiropahi from the nor...
- ILLUSTRATIONPart of the exquisitely sculpted creekbed of Waggon Creek in the area excluded from Paparoa National Park. Milburn op...
- ILLUSTRATIONMilburn's limestone mine at Cape Foulwind has supplied the nearby cement works with limestone since 1953. Over 40 yea...
- ILLUSTRATIONPhil Wood (second from left) with other Buller cavers and one of the Cousteau film team in Alpha Creek during the fil...
- ILLUSTRATIONOne of the Cousteau film team and Phil Wood (right) reconstruct a moa skeleton in Equinox Cave in Waggon Creek during...
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- ILLUSTRATIONThese limestone bluffs provide an impressive backdrop along part of the Greymouth-Westport highway. Milburn's propose...
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- CHAPTERBiological Control is it environmentally safe?
- ILLUSTRATIONThe 11-spotted ladybird (Coccinella undecimpunctata) ‒ introduced in 1874 to control aphids ‒ was the first insect de...
- ILLUSTRATIONSitona discoideus (about 4-5mm long), originally from the Mediterranean, is a pest of lucerne. First recorded in New ...
- ILLUSTRATIONA native broad-nosed weevil, Nicaeana cinerea (3-4mm long). The flightless adult weevils feed on a wide range of nati...
- ILLUSTRATIONZenagraphus metallescens (10-12mm long) in the Remarkables Range. This striking native weevil is quite common on many...
- ILLUSTRATIONAn Argentine stem weevil about to be parasitised by the wasp Microctonus hyperodae. The wasp has curved its abdomen u...
- ILLUSTRATIONTussock grassland on the East Otago Plateau at about 900 metres. This is typical broad-nosed weevil habitat where pop...
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- ILLUSTRATIONA "Malaise" trap in position on Otago's Old Man Range is being used to survey introduced and native Microctonus wasps...
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- CHAPTERForest Remnants and Urban Consolidation
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- ILLUSTRATIONLeft and below: view north from Auckland's Mt Hobson. This part of Remuera has not yet been heavily infilled, and tre...
- ILLUSTRATIONView of a steep slope that was largely cleared of native vegetation in St Heliers. Before clearance, little of the ol...
- ILLUSTRATIONThe present appearance of the hill behind St Heliers Bay. This whole slope has been intensively developed for housing...
- ILLUSTRATIONThe two development sites in Tarawera Bush on the border between Kohimarama and St Heliers. The development on the le...
- ILLUSTRATIONPart of the suburb of Epsom looking west from Mt Hobson. The suburb's trees remain prominent. In the foreground is pa...
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- ILLUSTRATIONLooking into the bush gully owned by St. John's College in Meadowbank ‒ probably the largest area of privately owned ...
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- CHAPTERprofile
- CHAPTERIn the field
- CHAPTERBig is beautiful?
- CHAPTERLocal giant
- ILLUSTRATIONThe heaviest insect in the world is New Zealand's giant weta, Deinacrida heteracantha. Deinacrida lives in the treeto...
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- ILLUSTRATIONGrowing up to 180 millimetres long, the giant red flatworm is one of about 30 native species of terrestrial flatworms...
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- CHAPTERbook reviews
- CHAPTERWild South: saving New Zealand's endangered birds
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- CHAPTEROur Stolen Future
- ILLUSTRATIONIllustration
- CHAPTERWild South: saving New Zealand's endangered birds
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- CHAPTERbulletin
- CHAPTERNew president
- CHAPTERAustralasian parrots
- CHAPTERAdvertising inserts
- CHAPTERObituary: Paul Every
- ILLUSTRATIONPaul Every
- CHAPTERCalling conservation volunteers
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- CHAPTER1996 index
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- CHAPTERFOREST and BIRD branch directory
- CHAPTERFOREST and BIRD lodges
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