Épisodes

  • Keeping tabs on Fiordland’s sharks and researching our deep-sea realm
    Feb 26 2025

    Using acoustic tags and a network of receivers attached to the seafloor, researchers are tracking the movements of sevengill sharks in Fiordland. They want to understand how these apex predators adjust to changing ocean temperatures, particularly during marine heat waves. Plus, an international collaboration involving a high-tech German research vessel is exploring New Zealand’s deep-sea realm.

    Guests:

    • Eva Ramey, PhD candidate, Victoria University of Wellington
    • Dr Alice Rogers, Victoria University of Wellington Coastal Ecology Lab
    • Dr Kareen Schnabel, NIWA
    • Professor André Freiwald, Senckenberg am Meer Research Institute
    • Dr Cornel de Ronde, GNS

    Learn more:

    • Read the accompanying article.
    • Listen to this 2016 episode about the Great white sharks of Australia and New Zealand.
    • RNZ journalist Kate Green also hopped aboard the RV Sonne to find out about its technology and capabilities.
    • This is not the first time the RV Sonne has been in New Zealand waters, one previous expedition also involved investigations of underwater volcanoes.

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    Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

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    26 min
  • Recruiting the birds to help reforestation, and investigating ADHD and fidgeting
    Feb 19 2025

    People with ADHD often fidget more than those without. Why might this be? Does it help them focus? Or distract them further? An Auckland Bioengineering Institute researcher has teamed up with the Mātai Medical Institute in Gisborne to investigate this using advanced MRI techniques. And at Waikereru ecosanctuary, local birds are being enlisted in a trial to help speed up the regeneration of native bush.

    Guests:

    • Professor Justin Fernandez, Auckland Bioengineering Institute
    • Dr Gil Newburn, Mātai Medical Institute
    • Professor Dame Anne Salmond, Waikereru Ecosanctuary

    Learn more:

    • Read the accompanying articles: Recruiting the birds to bring back the bush and Why fidgeting might be a good idea.
    • In 2017 Alison Ballance did a story about The 1769 Gardenwhere she spoke to the garden designer, curator and local botany expert.
    • To learn about the Mātai Medical Institute, listen to The advances in MRI coming out of Gisborne from November 2024.
    • The Mātai Medical Institute is also involved in research into recovery post meth addiction, concussion in teenage rugby players, and muscle development in children with cerebral palsy.

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    Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

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    26 min
  • Trapping to help whio and searching for extreme life
    Feb 12 2025

    The Eastern Whio Link project has been working to restore the whio or blue duck population in the rivers of the Waioeka Gorge. Sam Gibson, aka Sam the Trap Man, explains why he thinks the project has been so successful, and what he loves about these scrappy little ducks. Then, Professor Matthew Stott speaks to Claire Concannon about the complexities working on an active volcano in Antarctica, and what they hope to learn from the microbes they find there.

    Guests:

    • Sam Gisbon, Eastern Whio Link
    • Professor Matthew Stott, University of Canterbury

    Learn more:

    • Read and see more photos in the accompanying articles: Searching for extreme life and Trapping to help wild whio.
    • Head on to the slopes of Mount Erebus, and into an ice cave with Alison Ballance and Craig Cary in this 2011 episode.
    • Matthew Stott also works with heat-loving microbes in Rotorua, including some that appear to have broken the ‘rule of thumb’ and are only found in New Zealand.
    • Sam the Trap Man has also shared some yarns about bush life with RNZ’s Saturday Morning.

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    Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

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    27 min
  • Your friendly local environment centre
    Feb 5 2025

    All around New Zealand, people are trying to make things just a little bit better for their communities. The 22 Environment Centres, or Hubs, found throughout the country aim to help with this. Claire Concannon visits the Tairāwhiti Environment Centre to learn about their three pou of waste minimisation, education, and biodiversity, and about the environmental projects they support. She also meets their close neighbours – Gizzy Kai Rescue – who are looking to balance the scales of local food waste and food scarcity.

    Guests:

    • Steph Temple, Hub Coordinator, Tairāwhiti Environment Centre
    • Sam Rowland, Manager, Tairāwhiti Environment Centre
    • Lauren Beatty, Gizzy Kai Rescue
    • Dr Sarah Boyle, Wai Connections Tairāwhiti

    Learn more:

    • Visit the websites of Tairāwhiti Environment Centre, Gizzy Kai Rescue, the Every Bite programme, the Aotearoa Food Rescue Alliance, and Wai Connections.
    • Learn about other food rescue programmes around the country, including in Hawke’s Bay and Porirua.
    • Another conservation project in Tairāwhiti is aimed at bringing a beautiful endangered plant back from the brink.

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    Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

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    26 min
  • Trapping smarter not harder
    Jan 29 2025

    Trapping is hard mahi, especially on rugged terrain thick with vegetation. If you need to check a trap frequently to clear it and refresh the lure, the kilometres of bush bashing quickly add up. Plus, in areas where kea are found, trap options are limited by concerns for these curious and intelligent parrots. A team in Queenstown are investigating if the latest ‘smart’ traps – equipped with cameras, AI-powered to recognise specific targets, and networked so they can communicate and be operated remotely – might be the answer.

    Guests:

    • Paul Kavanagh, project director, Southern Lakes Sanctuary
    • Philip Green, field and technical advisor, Southern Lakes Sanctuary

    Learn more:

    • Read the article that accompanies this episode.
    • Country Life tagged along with the Halo project, part of Predator Free Dunedin, who are also trialling networked AI traps just north of the city.
    • One of the Southern Lakes Sanctuary hubs at Makaroraisfocused on trapping to protect mohua, and they are trialling an AI method to identifyindividual birds by their song.
    • In the Catlins, a team are battling predators and browsing pests to protect taonga there.

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    Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

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    27 min
  • Summer science: 'Nature's itching to put the bush back'
    Jan 22 2025

    The summer science series continues with an episode from RNZ podcast Country Life. From a block of gorse-infected scrubland on Banks Peninsula, renowned botanist Hugh Wilson has spent half a lifetime growing Hinewai Reserve into a 1600-hectare paradise of regenerated native forest by leaving nature to it. Cosmo Kentish-Barnes visits to learn more.

    The Country Life podcast takes you all over the motu to hear the extraordinary stories of every day rural New Zealand. Hosted and produced by Sally Round, Cosmo Kentish-Barnes, Duncan Smith and Gianina Schwanecke

    Listen to more Country Life episodes.


    Guest:

    • Hugh Wilson, botanist

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    Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

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    24 min
  • Summer science: Bird bandit
    Jan 15 2025

    The summer science series continues with an episode from RNZ podcast Black Sheep. Freddie Angell was New Zealand's most notorious wildlife smuggler. His repeated attempts at stealing and exporting native wildlife in the 1990s, including kea and tuatara, made him all but a household name. William Ray speaks to documentary-maker Andy MacDonald about his extraordinary story.

    Black Sheep is an RNZ podcast produced and presented by William Ray.

    Listen to more episodes of Black Sheep.

    Guest:

    • Andy MacDonald, documentary-maker

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    Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

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    44 min
  • Summer science: The underdogs under the ledge
    Jan 8 2025

    The summer science series continues with an episode from Tune into Nature, a podcast about New Zealand wildlife and wild places, and the people who look after them. Independent producer Karthic SS visits the Mokomoko Dryland Sanctuary Central Otago. Here, a team is working to bring back endangered lizards – Otago skinks and grand skinks – to the drylands wilderness they once lived in. These species are true wildlife underdogs – so rare and out of sight, not many people know they exist.

    Tune into Nature is a podcast produced and presented by Karthic SS.

    Listen to more Tune into Nature episodes.

    Guests:

    • Grant Norbury, ecologist and chairperson, Central Otago Ecological Trust (COET)
    • Anna Yeoman, science communicator and trustee, COET
    • Carey Knox, herpetologist, Southern Scales
    • Kathryn Longstaff, Department of Conservation (DOC) Central Otago
    • Ross Curtis , senior ranger, DOC Central Otago
    • Joanna, ranger, DOC Central Otago

    This episode was supported by OAR FM Dunedin, Science Communication at the University of Otago, and the NZ Lottery Grants Environment and Heritage fund, administered by Te Tari Taiwhenua, the Department of Internal Affairs.

    Learn more:

    • Alison Ballance goes on an urban lizard hunt in this 2017 episode.
    • Anna Yeoman spoke to Nine to Noon about her lizard book.

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    Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

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    25 min