New Zealand Wildlife

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.nz/post/573262

Possibly a little known / under appreciated gem in our city.

Did an unofficial (you can pay for guided tours) glow worm walk this evening in Otari-Wilton Bush - organized via my kids Childspace. I've lived nearby for years, and walked those trails many times without realizing that they were there.

We walked a short walk from the Northern carpark and all along the trail there were hundreds of glow worms right on the trail banks. I've never seen so many, so close (aside from Waitomo). Would definitely recommend for those with kids or anyone really.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.nz/post/241295

First part of the video is a hilarious appraisal of freedom camping and wellness influencers.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.nz/post/170276

The Hākaimangō-Matiatia​ marine reserve would cover a 2350ha area northwest of Waiheke Island, but it's been stalled after opposition from the Ngāti Pāoa Iwi Trust. However, the Ngāti Pāoa Trust Board supports the reserve. This is the fourth marine reserve to be delayed or cancelled recently after opposition from iwi groups.

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Home | NZ Garden Bird Survey (gardenbirdsurvey.nz)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by BlueEther@no.lastname.nz to c/nzwildlife@no.lastname.nz
 
 

What to do

  • Survey dates: 24th June – 2nd July
  • Select your garden, park, or school
  • Choose one day from 24th June to the 2nd July 2023
  • Look and listen for birds for ONE hour.
  • Record the HIGHEST number of a bird species observed at one time.
  • Submit your survey results
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Not wild, and not native.

I think this is Chungus, hunting flies.

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A flightless midge from Antarctica - Antarctica's only native insect

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.nz/post/124345

I remember coverage of this after the Jody F Millennium ran aground in 2002, and during the Rena clean-up in 2011. Apparently they've been warning us for 33 years now. This is one of those things that gets ignored until it's too late, then everyone starts pointing fingers. Partly because anyone who does what we need to do now won't get the credit they deserve. It's the fixers who get called heroes, not the preventers.

Didn't expect to be dropping ancient Chinese philosophy here, but I couldn't help but think of this story:

A lord of ancient China once asked his physician, a member of a family of healers, which of them was the most skilled in the art.

The physician, whose reputation was such that his name became synonymous with medical science in China, replied, “My eldest brother sees the spirit of sickness and removes it before it takes shape, so his name does not get out of the house.

“My elder brother cures sickness when it is still extremely minute, so his name does not get out of the neighborhood.

“As for me, I puncture veins, prescribe potions, and massage skin, so from time to time my name gets out and is heard among the lords.”

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.nz/post/90948

And it sounds like a Geiger counter when it's sniffing things out

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Cross-posted from: https://lemmy.nz/post/79539

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I just posted about this on !politics@lemmy.nz, but anyone who cares about NZ wildlife, tourism or climate change should have their say on this.

MBIE's Tourism Environment Leadership Group has developed a Draft Tourism Environment Action Plan. They say:

The draft action plan aims to ensure tourism has a positive impact on the natural environment and proposes 6 focus areas to achieve this. These areas or Tirohanga Hou (new pathways) are:

  • Tourism journeys are decarbonised
  • Tourism champions biodiversity
  • Visitor management is optimised for te taiao (nature)
  • Accelerated technology uptake and innovation enable regeneration
  • Tourism businesses are incentivised and enabled for sustainability and regeneration
  • The tourism system and its levers are optimised and resourced to support regeneration

Each area has multiple actions that will deliver positives not only for the environment but for communities and tourism operations.

Some actions see the tourism industry working with communities to create a picture of what healthy visitation looks like. Others focus on supporting and incentivising tourism operators to adopt sustainable or regenerative practices. Rapid investment in low-carbon technologies for long-haul travel is another key action.

You can take their survey here. It's anonymous and took me about 10 minutes. The full plan and info about how else to make submissions is here.

There's an RNZ article about this, but they mostly focus on "sustainable airline fuels".

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Got this photo of a nesting baby matuku moana / white-faced heron on holiday a few years back. Spotted it up in a tree at Grossi Point Reserve near Mapua, Tasman District.

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This is a fungus that should be visible this time of the year, can often be found in gardens with a good mulch bed

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