Project Janszoon Newsletter – Dec 2014
Message from Devon As the year draws to a close it is a good time to thank all who have contributed ideas, energy, hard work,
Message from Devon As the year draws to a close it is a good time to thank all who have contributed ideas, energy, hard work,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9knChl_y8L4 In August Project Janszoon and DOC completed an aerial 1080 operation in the Abel Tasman National Park. It was undertaken in response to a
Robin re-introduction to mainland looking positive A trapping trial at Pitt Head is showing encouraging results with rat numbers down to a level that should
There are only just over 600 South Island tīeke / saddleback left in New Zealand. In September 2014 40 were transferred from Motuara Island in
Applications for the 2018 Abel Tasman Youth Ambassadors are now open. The Abel Tasman Youth Ambassadors (ATYA) programme gives students from all of the Adopt
In early September I was involved with the work of Abel Tasman Birdsong Trust in transferring 40 saddleback from Motuara Island to Adele. This work is likely to
Beech mast confirmed Monitoring of beech seed has confirmed a widespread beech mast in the Abel Tasman in 2014 with evidence showing rat numbers have
Ever since he heard the rare mycoheterotrophic orchid Danhatchia (Yoania) australis, grew in the South Island under nikau at Kaihoka Lakes in Golden Bay and
Motueka High School students are the first students to earn NCEA credits as part of their involvement in a pilot education programme in the Abel
In May 2014 Project Janszoon transferred 12 captive raised kakariki to the Abel Tasman National Park from Lochmara Lodge in the Marlborough Sounds. Two weeks
Two species of kākāriki or parakeet were once very common on mainland New Zealand. In fact they were so common in the Nelson and Golden Bay
Twelve kākāriki or yellow-crowned parakeet released into the Abel Tasman National Park today are the first captive raised kākāriki to ever be released onto the
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