Nature

The Gentle Goliath of the Ocean - Sperm Whales Kaikoura
By Words Annie Studholme IMAGES NZ Whale & Dolphin Trust March 26, 2024
Capable of diving more than two kilometres beneath the surface, the sperm whale (parāoa) has the largest brain of any creature to have lived on Earth. Though widespread, the waters off Kaikōura remain one of the few places worldwide where these elusive creatures are found close to shore year-round.
A Backcountry Voice  - Jan Finlayson
By Pip Goldsbury September 19, 2023
Jan Finlayson is an advocate for outdoor access and after years of leadership and advocacy, her contribution has been awarded with an Outdoor Access Champion Award. However, there’s more to Jan that just paper roads!
Towering Taonga - Christchurch Pūtaringamotu/Riccarton Bush
By Words Sue Kingham / Images Alister Winter March 22, 2023
Despite its urban location, in the heart of Christchurch Pūtaringamotu/Riccarton Bush is a vibrant forest alive with history, flora and fauna. As the last remnant of alluvial podocarp forest on the lower Canterbury Plains, it is filled with magnificent taonga.
Something Fishy - Chenopodium detestans The Fish Guts Plant
By Words Annie Studholme November 17, 2022
With its smelly reputation and equally unimpressive looks, the critically endangered New Zealand fish guts plant will likely never make it on a tourism poster or a commemorative stamp. Still, this curious little plant deserves our attention.
Vampires of the Sea - The pouched Lamprey Geotria australis
By Words Annie Studholme September 20, 2022
Scary reputation aside, the ugly yet noble lamprey has survived for millions of years but is now under threat nationwide. An important taonga species for Māori, it’s hoped new monitoring techniques will be able to shed light on their numbers locally.
The Mohua Tiakina Ngā Manu predator control programme.
By Words Annie Studholme May 23, 2022
Reintroduced over the past 14 years through a series of translocations, Canterbury’s inland valleys are again home to small populations of mohua (yellowhead), the sparrow-sized songsters with bright yellow heads and breasts that grace the $100 banknote, after fears they had been lost forever.
The Plight of the Pohowera Kaikōura’s Banded Dotterel Study
By Words Annie Studholme / Images Ailsa McGilvary-Howard March 24, 2022
Kaikōura’s Banded Dotterel Study continues to shine a light on the serious plight of New Zealand’s inconspicuous endemic shorebird, pohowera, which is being pushed towards extinction because of severe ongoing decline.
An Oasis of Hope - Trees for Canterbury
By Words Sue Kingham / Images Alister Winter November 18, 2021
Trees for Canterbury is not a standard plant nursery. Manager Steve Bush shares his passion for the not-for-profit organisation, whose mission is to employ disadvantaged people in the community, teach environmental awareness and cultivate native plants for regeneration.
A woman is sitting on a rock on the beach.
By Words Kim Newth September 22, 2021
Kelp is a common enough sight on our coastlines, particularly when big storms out at sea bring clumps of it drifting to shore. It is no more than seaweed on a Sunday beach walk for most of us, but Christchurch woman Daneen Morgan has built a business on kelp and is hard at work developing a range of ‘wildly natural’ marine-based health and beauty products.
Saving the Pīwakawaka
By Words Robert Koller / Images Hans Wijker May 23, 2021
The Fantail Trust is a charitable organisation set up to establish a native bird and plant sanctuary along the Rakaia Gorge Walkway. Such is the dream and goal of its organisers and dedicated caregivers, who rightfully believe every bird and plant saved is well worth the effort.
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