Your search for 'vision mission goals of Taranki Region Council' returned 5043 results.

Biodiversity - KNEs

The Council's Inventory of Key Native Ecosystems (KNEs), first published in 2006 and continually updated since, documents hundreds of biodiversity hotspots. Inventory of Key Native Ecosystems in Taranaki (2006) Contents, Introduction and Background, Reader's Guide (p1-7) (192 KB pdf) More KNEs Contents, Introduction and Background, Reader's Guide (p1-7) (192 KB pdf) Alfred Road - Kuwhatahi (p8-79) (1.4 MB pdf) Lake Kaikura - Nofolk Road (p80-147) (1.3 MB pdf) Nowell's Lakes - Rowan Road

TRC Factsheet 2025 Local Government Elections

page 2025 LOCAL GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS 11 OCTOBER 2025 FACT SHEET | ĀROHI TARANAKI REGIONAL COUNCIL WHAT DOES A REGIONAL COUNCIL DO? While district councils are responsible for a wide range of local services in your area, the role and responsibilities of the Regional Council involve managing the region’s natural resources. The Taranaki Regional Council manages land, air, coast and the quality of water in our lakes and rivers. They are also responsible for biodiversity,

Trap watch: measuring Taranaki

Taranaki’s native wildlife, predators and urban trappers are in the spotlight, with some species and trap catches under surveillance 24/7, providing live data. Scientist Halema Jamieson, from Taranaki Regional Council, leads the region-wide monitoring that’s shining a light on native wildlife, plants and the predators that threaten them - rats, mustelids (stoats, weasels and ferrets), possums, and feral cats – as part of the region-wide project Towards Predator-Free Taranaki. The latest