or our other social media
Facebook: https://t.co/43LX7pA7Mp
Instagram: https://t.co/PUzABsm65d
LinkedIn: https://t.co/KLC0deDsFJ
Threads: https://t.co/dJZBUZlkt9
Kia ora Twitter (or whatever this is called now)
👎The bad news: We will no longer post on this channel.
👍The good news: You can keep up to date with us on our website https://t.co/sDQiqXg9ag
When you think of “introduced predators”, what comes to mind? Probably feral cats, rats and stoats. Wasps are introduced predators too – and our mild climate and lack of natural predators mean these invasive insects are a big problem for Aotearoa.
https://t.co/UExU3i9NWs
Peripatus, or “velvet worms”, are creatures reminiscent of the formidable sandworms from Frank Herbert’s science fiction novel-turned-film, Dune.
https://t.co/CH1Xli5FIR
In Lyttelton Harbour, a story of family, nature, and the bond between a father, his son, and their furry companion unfolds. A story so sweet it should be the premise for a feel-good Disney movie.
https://t.co/3MVSHh7tVG
Today, for International Women's Day, we shine a spotlight on some of the women who shaped – and continue to shape – conservation in Aotearoa New Zealand.
https://t.co/FbQOSpiz9f
Predator Free Apprentice Cam Maclean’s big OE looked slightly different.
Instead of slinging pints in a UK pub, Cam found himself building predator free fences in the Caribbean and caring for critically endangered birds on Aotearoa’s distant outpost.
https://t.co/QX1fJYGiq7
📋🪤Check out this list you can check off as you check your traps! Make trapping more effective and checking more efficient. Download it today and start levelling up your trapping.
https://t.co/rWixKjQ23U
Rats are front-of-mind after recent supermarket sightings, but they're always around. Our CE Jessi Morgan talked with @radionz this afternoon about all things predator control.
https://t.co/11ENkdOTZp
A ferret sniffing around petrel burrows and gannet colony on the west coast of Auckland ignited a race against time to protect the seabirds.
https://t.co/Al4YamXC0k
Kirikiriroa (Hamilton) may be renowned for its beautiful gardens, but the city holds a surprising truth – much of its greenery is introduced plantlife, not the native species that once thrived there.
https://t.co/g1M0AHPM6V