‘A real win for biodiversity’ – Endangered whio set free
Several whio or blue ducks were successfully released into Abel Tasman National Park this week. Photo: Ruth Bollongino / Project Janszoon Radio NZ, 26 February 2023
Several whio or blue ducks were successfully released into Abel Tasman National Park this week. Photo: Ruth Bollongino / Project Janszoon Radio NZ, 26 February 2023
Ask an evolutionary biologist what his idea of the ultimate holiday is, and if it’s Professor Doug Robinson, he will say; trudging the tracks of
The Abel Tasman National Park is now playing a major role in the survival of New Zealand’s rarest duck, the pāteke / brown teal.
The A24 trapping networks in the park are proving to be so highly effective in keeping rat numbers down that the network of self re-setting
The Abel Tasman National Park experienced a substantial drought in the summer of 2018/19, with virtually no rain for nearly three months. The impact is
26 April 2019, Nelson Mail By Skara Bohny Kiwi could be coming back to the Abel Tasman thanks to successful predator control programmes like an upcoming aerial
1 April 2019, Wilderness Magazine While thousands walked, kayaked and camped around the Abel Tasman coast this summer, Kathy Ombler found solitude and serenading bellbirds
26 March 2019, Nelson Mail By Samantha Gee The islands off the coast of the Abel Tasman National Park have been declared free of predators
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