October 3, 2017

Great Kererū Count Observations closing.

Hi everyone

Just a quick heads-up that I will be closing down the Great Kererū Count Observations tomorrow 9am

Please make sure if you are adding your observations for the Great Kererū Count that anything outside the date range will not be counted.
22nd September – 1st October 2017.

Thanks again.

Ngā mihi nui,
Tony Stoddard | Kererū Discovery | Great Kererū Count Coordinator

Posted on October 3, 2017 06:11 AM by urbanwildlifetrust urbanwildlifetrust | 0 comments | Leave a comment

September 21, 2017

Great Kererū Count 2017 has now started.

This year is our chance to vote for nature, so let’s make kererū count.

From the 22nd September to 1st October we need everyone across New Zealand out making observation on where kererū are and also where they are not. Please share and encourage all of your family, friends and work mates to take part in this year’s Great Kererū Count - then get out and get counting.

Happy counting everyone 😊
Ngā mihi nui,
Tony Stoddard | Kererū Discovery | Great Kererū Count Coordinator

http://greatkererucount.nz/

Posted on September 21, 2017 12:23 PM by urbanwildlifetrust urbanwildlifetrust | 0 comments | Leave a comment

September 5, 2017

Great Kererū Count 2017 is coming!

The Great Kererū Count is coming!
22nd September to the 1st October 2017

If you haven’t already joined the Great Kererū Count 2017 project make sure you do before the 22nd of September - https://inaturalist.nz/projects/great-kereru-count-2017

The more people who participate, the better the understanding we will get on how kererū are doing across the country. So it’s time to turn your eyes to the skies and make a note of any kererū that you see.

The Great Kererū Count aims to build an understanding of the abundance and distribution of kereru throughout New Zealand through citizen science.

Why get involved? Kererū are protected birds and endemic to New Zealand. Kererū numbers are much lower than the flocks reported from 50-100 years ago, but they do not have formal threatened status. This means no centralised data is collated to monitor overall national trends. Given the significance of kererū for the survival of New Zealand’s native forests (kererū are the only remaining bird species able to disperse the large seeds of particular forest trees) it is important that some form of national monitoring exists.

What does the future hold for kererū? Large flocks of more than one hundred kererū were once a common sight in skies over New Zealand our vision is to see them again.

Ngā mihi nui,
Tony Stoddard
Kererū Discovery / Great Kererū Count Coordinator

Posted on September 5, 2017 09:03 PM by urbanwildlifetrust urbanwildlifetrust | 0 comments | Leave a comment

October 14, 2015

Now the main Kereru count project

This is now the default project to add Kereru observations to when there is not a nation wide Kereru survey in progress. In other words, add Kereru observations here unless there is a current nation wide Kereru count project, in which case add the observations there instead!

Posted on October 14, 2015 10:28 PM by tony_wills tony_wills | 3 comments | Leave a comment

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