Your search for 'regional explorer' returned 4436 results.

Chewbacca defeats 'Boba' ferret

road from Sally's place. Sally is currently in the process of placing a QEII covenant on a lake, a large old oak tree, and a pocket of native bush located on her property, which was all once farm land. Sally says that it was her grandparents Stella and Percy Webster's vision to preserve the land for their family and for the future. Their influence had been passed down through the generations, says Sally. "The Taranaki Regional Council along with QEII, NZ Walkways, DOC and Wild For Taranaki (the

Schedules of charges

Limited (NZ Energy Corp.) $10,583 NZEC Waihapa Limited and NZEC Tariki Limited $209 Origin Energy Resources (Kupe) Limited $16,953 Origin Energy Resources NZ (Rimu) Limited $23,068 Petrochem Limited $5,573 Remediation (NZ) Limited $55,163 Shell Exploration NZ Limited $13,888 Shell Todd Oil Services Limited (New Plymouth) $48,621 Surrey Road Landfarms Limited $9,096 TAG Oil (NZ) Limited $16,031 Taranaki Ventures II Limited $345 Taranaki Ventures

Towards Predator-Free - urban

Hundreds of Taranaki people have already become urban trappers, doing their bit for our precious biodiversity. Why don't you join them? To support our native wildlife and plant diversity, one in five New Plymouth households needs to be actively trapping rats. David MacLeod, the Taranaki Regional Councill Chairman, explains why in this short video: Urban trapping in New Plymouth Get involved and get trapping Off to a good start in New Plymouth Off to a good start — the existing predator control

No ‘bogeys’ on this course

has been the greenskeeper there for 17. With help from the Taranaki Regional Council and support from the course committee and members he and his team have been able to install ten DOC 200 and two A24 rat & stoat traps across the 40-hectare course. After some successful results catching rats over the past month Steve says course members are really keen to volunteer and have put their hands up to get involved. “We have a weekly newsletter where I post what we’ve caught in the traps over the week,

Best native-bird breeding season in 30 years

landscape-scale predator control on urban, rural and conservation land, Mr Shanley says. A collective effort by local residents, Taranaki Regional Council, Taranaki Mounga, an ecological restorative project on Egmont National Park, local iwi and schools is helping remove rats, possums and stoats to restore native biodiversity in the area, as part of Towards Predator-Free Taranaki. Mr Church hasn’t seen a possum on his property since September 2019, but understands they are skilled at staying out of sight. If

TRC Northern Hill Country FMU Consultation Document September 2023

page Northern Hill Country FRESHWATER MANAGEMENT UNIT Discussion document page Taranaki Regional Council Private Bag 713 Stratford ISSN: 1178-1467 (Online) Document: 3203972 (Word) Document: 3209250 (Pdf) September 2023 page Purpose and contents of this

New trapping technology for rural New Plymouth

never-before-recorded information will be shared with other regions to help achieve the nation-wide ambition to remove all rats, stoats and possums from New Zealand by 2050. New Plymouth farmers Steve and Daphne Tarrant, of Waiwhakaiho, have been trapping possums and stoats on their 18-hectare farmlet for the past five years and are looking forward to easier trapping and removing more predators with the new technology. “We have bellbirds, tui, and pigeons come in the late afternoon, I can get away in a world of my

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

Stadium update: Refurbishment and repair progress

The Taranaki Regional Council will not call for tenders for the repair and refurbishment of Yarrow Stadium until there is greater clarity on the impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic. “The Council is part of the Taranaki community and is aware of the uncertainty and the potentially significant impacts that the Covid-19 situation is having on us all now and in the coming months and years,” says the Council Chair, David MacLeod. "We will continue with preparatory work to get the project to tender

Mangati Catchment Joint Monitoring Programme Annual Report 2020 2021

page Mangati Catchment Joint Monitoring Programme Annual Report 2020-2021 Technical Report 2021-74 page Taranaki Regional Council Private Bag 713 Stratford ISSN: 1178-1467 (Online) Document: 2912895 (Word) Document: 2972246 (Pdf) March 2022 page Mangati Catchment Joint Monitoring Programme Annual Report 2020-2021 Technical Report 2021-74