page
Freshwater contact recreational
water quality at Taranaki sites
State of the Environment
Monitoring Report
2015-2016
Technical Report 2016-01
ISSN: 0114-8184 (Print) Taranaki Regional Council
ISSN: 1178-1467 (Online) Private Bag 713
Document: 1671518 (Word) STRATFORD
Document: 1693312 (Pdf)
June 2016
page
page
2016
Community Biodiversity Fund
Application for funding
Closing date for applications: 30 April 2016
page
The Trust will consider projects which support the
ecological priorities outlined in Section 5 of the Taranaki
Biodiversity Forum Accord:
1. Secure populations of Threatened, At-risk or
Regionally distinctive species (see page 8)
2. Protect habitat of Threatened, At risk or
Regionally distinctive species
3. Maintain the extent of rare and
page
page
Project Number: 420W1016
DISCLAIMER
This report has been prepared by the Institute of Geological and
Nuclear Sciences Limited (GNS Science) exclusively for and under
contract to Taranaki Regional Council. Unless otherwise agreed in
writing by GNS Science, GNS Science accepts no responsibility for
any use of, or reliance on any contents of this Report by any person
other than Taranaki Regional Council and shall not be liable to any
page
page
Project Number: 420W1016
DISCLAIMER
This report has been prepared by the Institute of Geological and
Nuclear Sciences Limited (GNS Science) exclusively for and under
contract to Taranaki Regional Council. Unless otherwise agreed in
writing by GNS Science, GNS Science accepts no responsibility for
any use of, or reliance on any contents of this Report by any person
other than Taranaki Regional Council and shall not be liable to any
page
page
Project Number: 420W1016
DISCLAIMER
This report has been prepared by the Institute of Geological and
Nuclear Sciences Limited (GNS Science) exclusively for and under
contract to Taranaki Regional Council. Unless otherwise agreed in
writing by GNS Science, GNS Science accepts no responsibility for
any use of, or reliance on any contents of this Report by any person
other than Taranaki Regional Council and shall not be liable to any
page
Public Transport Service
Tendering and Contracting
Manual
August 2014
Taranaki Regional Council
47 Cloten Road
Private Bag 713
06 765 7127
www.trc.govt.nz
Version Six
Doc #: 394810
page
page
CONTENTS
Definitions 1
Definitions 1
Introduction 1
1. Introduction 1
This manual 1 1.1
Amendments to the manual and correction of records 1 1.2
Other
spotless crake can often be heard.
WHAT YOU CAN DO TO HELP
Create, protect and retire wetlands on your property.
Set up traps to control predators around suitable habitat.
Plant native wetland species and eradicate invasive plant species in your
wetland.
Report sightings to the Taranaki Regional Council or the Ornithological
Society NZ Regional Representative Barry Hartley
(barry_hartley@xtra.co.nz).
CONSERVATION
The spotless crake is a threatened
page
Monday, 4 May 2020
Public notice – rating information database
The Taranaki Regional Council’s rating information database records all information
required for setting and assessing rates on properties within the region. For each rating
property, this includes its valuation and any categories that belong to that property that are
used to charge separate targeted rates.
This database is available for public inspection. It includes the physical street address of the
page
Introduction
The Stream Health Measurement Assessment Kit (SHMAK) kit has been modified for use by
secondary school groups within the Taranaki region. The original kit was designed by NIWA
(National Institute of Water and Atmosphere) for use by farmers in New Zealand to monitor the
‘health’ of the streams that flow across their land. In combination with existing stream
assessment techniques already provided to school pupils by Taranaki Regional Council
page
Regional Council
Taranaki
What does it mean?
Protecting
Council undertook a ‘wave survey’ as part of the review. It
allowed the community to tell us which surf breaks are valued,
and why. This information was used to determine the
appropriate level of protection for each break.
In the Proposed Coastal Plan, all surf breaks are protected
through the resource consent process. But the level of
protection will vary. Surf breaks have been classified as either