Kauri rescue – citizens combating kauri dieback

More than 200 landowners have signed up to a community-led programme that’s aiming to save the iconic kauri.

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Stirring waters to clean them up

Disrupting waterways may hold the key to long-term stream restoration.

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Strengthening partnership with Māori

Glenice Paine’s appointment to our Governance Group strengthens our commitment to Te Ao Māori perspectives and values

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Eight ways to improve native vegetation on private land

Eight recommendations on how we can help increase the benefits of large-scale native restorations on private land.

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Protecting biodiversity earns award

BioHeritage’s James Russell has received a Society for Conservation Biology​ Oceania section distinguished service award.

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DNA could help save threatened species

Researchers are collecting DNA information from one of our most threatened freshwater fish – the Canterbury mudfish (kōwaro) – in an effort to make it more resilient to future environmental change.

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Early Career Workshop

In July 2018, about 40 BioHeritage early career researchers attended a workshop that aimed to foster collaboration among their wide-ranging projects.

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New Zealand Journal of Ecology Special Issue

We’re proudly supporting an upcoming special issue of the New Zealand Journal of Ecology – Mātauranga Māori and Shaping Ecological Futures.

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Kauri dieback – act now or it will be too late

Kauri are too important to lose, and if we don’t act now it will be too late. Dr Monica Gerth

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Wasp research creating a buzz

The use of pheromones, gene silencing, population modelling and future gene drives are all showing promise when it comes to controlling wasps.

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