Blue Springs, CC0
Blue Springs, CC0

We need mātauranga Māori to halt further biodiversity loss

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The knowledge of indigenous people, traditionally passed down through generations, has been acknowledged as being critical to the prevention of mass biodiversity loss. In a mātauranga Māori special issue, the New Zealand Journal of Ecology invites local researchers to explore the cultural and spiritual ties Māori bring to conservation and ecology. The issue covers topics from using Māori bird names as a sense of identity, to how bilingual environmental games can remedy the increasing disconnect from nature due to technology.

Journal/conference: New Zealand Journal of Ecology

Organisation/s: Manaaki Whenua - Landcare Research, University of Otago, University of Canterbury, University of Auckland, National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA), Victoria University of Wellington, University of Waikato, Zealandia, University of Wisconsin, Unitec

Funder: See individual papers for funding information.

Media Release

From: Manaaki Whenua - Landcare Research

Manaaki Whenua - Landcare Research is proud to announce the contribution of its researchers to a special Mātauranga Māori issue of the New Zealand Journal of Ecology. The special issue is due to be launched at an evening event on December 2, during the New Zealand Ecological Society conference at Lincoln University.

Māori have distinct cultural knowledge, values, and perspectives that establish rights, responsibilities and relationships with flora and fauna. There is an increasing recognition from scientists, practitioners, environmental managers, policy makers and others that mātauranga Māori, and working with Māori communities, enhances our understanding of ecology and provides valuable perspectives and frameworks to guide research, management and policy development.

Manaaki Whenua’s researchers are first authors on three of the 14 papers in the special issue, which cover subjects as diverse as kaitiakitanga and urban ecological restoration, use of Te Reo in taxonomy (the naming of species), an investigation of the toxin tutin in rodent pest control, and a conservation partnership to save a New Zealand native frog.

This is the first time that the journal has produced a Mātauranga Māori issue. The abstract of each paper has been translated into Te Reo. Editorial work over the past year has been led by Manaaki Whenua researcher Dr Priscilla Wehi, with a team of expert ecologists who affiliate to iwi throughout the country, and who themselves work with mātauranga and partner with Maori communities.

Our researchers are indebted to Cate Macinnes-Ng, the President of the New Zealand Ecological Society, who was instrumental in bringing this special issue to life.

The event is being sponsored by Manaaki Whenua - Landcare Research, the BioHeritage National Science Challenge, Te Pūnaha Matatini Centre of Research Excellence and the Centre for Biodiversity & Biosecurity, University of Auckland.

Attachments:

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  • New Zealand Ecological Society
    Web page
    All 13 journal articles can be downloaded here
  • New Zealand Ecological Society
    Web page
    Link to the journal containing all relevant papers.

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