Academic literature on the topic 'New Zealand falcon'

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Journal articles on the topic "New Zealand falcon"

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KROSS, SARA M., PAUL G. McDONALD, and XIMENA J. NELSON. "New Zealand Falcon nests suffer lower predation in agricultural habitat than in natural habitat." Bird Conservation International 23, no. 4 (April 10, 2013): 512–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0959270913000130.

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SummaryIntroduced mammalian predators have been implicated in the majority of avian extinctions on oceanic islands around the globe. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the decimated New Zealand avifauna, where introduced predators remain the primary threat to virtually all surviving endemic species, including the threatened New Zealand Falcon Falco novaeseelandiae. We used remote videography at falcon nests and conducted an artificial nest experiment to compare the rates of predation and responsible predators of falcons nesting in hills against those nesting in nearby commercial vineyards.
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Green, CH, BD Gartrell, and WAG Charleston. "Serratospiculosis in a New Zealand Falcon (Falco novaeseelandiae)." New Zealand Veterinary Journal 54, no. 4 (August 2006): 198–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00480169.2006.36696.

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Thomas, Bindi, Edward O. Minot, and John D. Holland. "Home Range and Habitat Use of the New Zealand Falcon (Falco novaeseelandiae) within a Plantation Forest: A Satellite Tracking Study." International Journal of Ecology 2010 (2010): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2010/829702.

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We tracked two adult and three juvenile New Zealand falcons (Falco novaeseelandiae) in Kaingaroa Forest pine plantation from 2002 to 2008 using Argos satellite technology. The home ranges for both adults and juveniles varied, ranging between 44 and 587 km2. The falcons occasionally utilised areas outside the forest and used stands of all ages within the forest, generally in proportion to their availability. For the most part, the juveniles remained within ca. 8 km of their nests and dispersed at 58, 69, and 68 days after fledging. Falcon movement information was obtained from an average of fou
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Horikoshi, Chifuyu, Phil F. Battley, and Edward O. Minot. "Annual survival estimates and risk of fluoroacetate (1080) secondary poisoning for New Zealand falcons (Falco novaeseelandiae) in a managed exotic forest." Wildlife Research 45, no. 2 (2018): 155. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr17144.

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Context The risk of secondary poisoning to native fauna during pest control operations is an issue of global concern. In New Zealand, non-target impacts during sodium fluoroacetate (1080) operations are particularly contentious. 1080 is used extensively for pest control for conservation, bovine tuberculosis control, and in plantation forestry for seedling protection from herbivores. The endemic New Zealand falcon (Falco novaeseelandiae) breeds in Kaingaroa forest, an intensively managed pine plantation where regular 1080 poison operations are conducted; however, causes of mortality and risks o
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Horikoshi, Chifuyu, Phil F. Battley, and Edward O. Minot. "Designing Timber Harvesting to Enhance New Zealand Falcon Populations." Journal of Wildlife Management 85, no. 3 (February 18, 2021): 556–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jwmg.22013.

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Seaton, R., and LP Barea. "The New Zealand falcon and wind farms: a risk assessment framework." New Zealand Journal of Zoology 40, no. 1 (March 2013): 16–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03014223.2012.754361.

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Seaton, Richard, Noel Hyde, John D. Holland, Edward O. Minot, and Brian P. Springett. "Breeding Season Diet and Prey Selection of the New Zealand Falcon (Falco novaeseelandiae) in a Plantation Forest." Journal of Raptor Research 42, no. 4 (December 2008): 256–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.3356/jrr-07-50.1.

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Bemrose, Anna. "Alf Howard." Polar Record 47, no. 2 (January 27, 2011): 191–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0032247410000422.

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Alf Howard, (Fig. 1) died on 4 July 2010. He was the last surviving member of Sir Douglas Mawson's 1929–1931 British, Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition (BANZARE) that made further extensive claims to sovereignty defining the limits of what was to become Australian Antarctic Territory (AAT) in 1933. He was also the last survivor to have served aboard the coal-fired three-masted wooden ship Discovery built in Dundee for Captain Robert Falcon Scott's 1901–1904 National Antarctic Expedition.
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Mathieu, Renaud, Philip Seddon, and Jamie Leiendecker. "Predicting the distribution of raptors using remote sensing techniques and Geographic Information Systems: A case study with the Eastern New Zealand falcon(Falco novaeseelandiae)." New Zealand Journal of Zoology 33, no. 1 (January 2006): 73–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03014223.2006.9518432.

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Isaksson, Elisabeth, Wibjörn Karlén, Paul Mayewski, Mark Twickler, and Sallie Whitlow. "A high-altitude snow chemistry record from Amundsenisen, Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica." Journal of Glaciology 47, no. 158 (2001): 489–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.3189/172756501781832070.

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AbstractIn this paper a detailed record of major ions from a 20 m deep firn core from Amundsenisen, western Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica, is presented. The core was drilled at 75° S, 2° E (2900 m a.s.l.) during austral summer 1991/92. The following ions were measured at 3 cm resolution: Na+, Mg2+, Ca2+, Cl−, NO3−, S042− and CH3SO3H (MSA). The core was dated back to 1865 using a combination of chemical records and volcanic reference horizons. The volcanic eruptions identified in this core are Mount Ngauruhoe, New Zealand (1974–75), Mount Agung, Indonesia (1963), Azul, Argentina (1932), and a
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "New Zealand falcon"

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Kross, Sara Mae. "The efficacy of reintroducing the New Zealand falcon into the vineyards of Marlborough for pest control and falcon conservation." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Biological Sciences, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/6726.

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In our ever more populated world, the rapid expansion and intensification of agriculture is driving worldwide biodiversity loss, and the interactions between production landscapes and wildlife conservation are becoming increasingly important. Farming systems depend on ecosystem services such as biological control, while conservationists are calling for the establishment of conservation initiatives in non-preserve landscapes. Despite this, the goals of agriculture and the goals of predator-conservation are rarely mutual. Here, I demonstrate one of the first examples of a mutually beneficial sce
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Books on the topic "New Zealand falcon"

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Pittaway, Bob. Fallow deer hunting in New Zealand. Auckland, N.Z: Halcyon Press, 1992.

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Book chapters on the topic "New Zealand falcon"

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Otway, Whitley. "Establishment of Mesopotamia Fallow Deer in New Zealand and Their Hybridization with European Fallow Deer." In The Biology of Deer, 400. New York, NY: Springer New York, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-2782-3_92.

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Hunt, W. F., and R. J. M. Hay. "Seasonal Differences in Pasture Species Preferences by Red and Fallow Deer in New Zealand." In The Biology of Deer, 463. New York, NY: Springer New York, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-2782-3_111.

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Asher, G. W., and M. Langridge. "Seasonal Pattern of Births, Female Reproductive Success and Causes of Neonate Mortality of Farmed Red Deer and Fallow Deer in Northern New Zealand." In The Biology of Deer, 217. New York, NY: Springer New York, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-2782-3_50.

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Ahdar, Rex. "Vertical Arrangements." In The Evolution of Competition Law in New Zealand, 124–51. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198855606.003.0005.

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Then law governing vertical arrangements is a comparatively undeveloped area in NZ competition law. With only resale price maintenance (RPM) expressly prohibited by the Act, it has fallen to the general prohibitions on anticompetitive arrangements and monopolization to address traditional antitrust mischiefs such as exclusive dealing and tying. The leading case on exclusive dealing was heavily influenced by Chicagoan thinking to the degree that the courts gave the green light to durable distribution arrangements that countenanced foreclosure on a large scale and were plainly anti-competitive. However, the few cases on tying have been more fruitful insofar as remedies have been granted to rectify blatant leveraging by dominant firms into related markets. A period of active enforcement of RPM by the Commerce Commission marked the first decade, but the swathe of prosecutions dried up as the twenty-first century began.
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Lutz Warren, Julianne. "2. Learning a Dead Birdsong." In Living Earth Community, 19–40. Open Book Publishers, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.11647/obp.0186.02.

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Remembered songs of extinct wattlebirds, endemic to Aotearoa New Zealand, catalyze Julianne Warren's storytelling. In Chapter 2, she spins a path from first listening to a Pākehā-narrated recording of an elder Māori performing traditional mimicry of Huia. Replaying these dead bird-human voices interacting with sounds in the near-Arctic helps her begin learning, in poet W.S. Merwin’s words, to 'hear what never/Has fallen silent.' Between antipodes, ancestral echoes escape from machines, and sleeping languages live on—in loss—uncanny companionships of hope's sound.
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Koning, Ashley, and Suzette Janet Poole. "Supporting People Who Experience Co-Existing Mental Health and Addiction Problems." In Substance Abuse and Addiction, 59–80. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-7666-2.ch003.

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Meeting the needs of people with co-existing mental health and addiction problems is a challenge faced by many mental health and addiction services and providers. A compounding factor has been the separation of mental health and addiction services which has meant that many people with co-existing mental health and addiction problems have fallen through the cracks between services or had issues not recognized or responded to, leading to poor health outcomes. This chapter describes the approach taken by New Zealand's workforce development centers to support services to improve responsiveness and workforce capability to work with people with co-existing mental health and addiction problems. International research on implementation is briefly summarized before discussion about the impact of the national approach and the barriers to implementation that have emerged. Recommendations for next steps conclude this chapter.
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Rahman, Hakikur. "Role of ICT in Establishing E-Government System for Disadvantaged Communities." In Information Communication Technologies, 1482–93. IGI Global, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59904-949-6.ch101.

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Information and communications technologies (ICTs) are playing an increasingly vital role in the daily lives of all communities by revolutionizing their working procedures and rules of governance. ICTs offer a unique opportunity for governing elite to overcome the crisis of representative democracy, as ICT and the Internet empower civil society to play its role more effectively and facilitate the performance of governments’ main function-serving the people who elect them (Misnikov, 2003). In the realm of government, ICT applications are promising to enhance the delivery of public goods and services to common people not only by improving the process and management of government, but also by redefining the age-old traditional concepts. Community networking groups and local government authorities are well placed to campaign for greater inclusion for all members of the community in the information society. Possible areas to target include the provision of technology at low or no cost to groups through community technology centres or out of hours school access. There are many possibilities and local government must take a significant role in these activities (Young, 2000). Information society is based on the effective use and easy access of information and knowledge, while ICT for development (or ICTD) is not restricted to technology itself but focusing on manifold development and diverse manifestations for the people to improve their well-being. ICTD has deep roots in governance, is part of governance and has effects on governance patters and practices at both central and local level. By recognizing these facts, UNDP focuses on technologies to end poverty at WSIS Cyber Summit 2003, and emphasizes on ways that new technologies can help lift more than one billion people out of extreme poverty (UNDP, 2003). Apart from the four Asian IT giants (Korea, Rep., Hong Kong, China, Taiwan, China, and Japan), most of the Asian countries have fallen under the “low access” category of the Digital Access Index. This has also been referred in the WSIS Cyber Summit 2003, until now, limited infrastructure has often been regarded as the main barrier to bridging the digital divide (ITU, 2003). Among the countries with ICT spending as share of their GDP, Sweden, UK, The Netherlands, Denmark, and France (8.63, 7.97, 7.39, 7.19, and 6.57% respectively during 1992-2001) remain at the top (Daveri, 2002, p. 9), while countries like Bangladesh, Greece, Mexico, Niger, and many more remain at the bottom (EC, 2001; ITU, 2003b; Miller, 2001; Piatkowski, 2002). In a similar research it has been found that in terms of average share of ICT spending GDP, New Zealand, Sweden, Australia, USA, and UK (9.3, 8.4, 8.1, 8.1, and 7.8% respectively during 1992-1999) were among the highest (Pohjola, 2002, p. 7), though most of the countries in the Asian and African regions remain below the average of 5%. The disadvantaged communities in the countries staying below average in ICT spending seem to be lagging in forming appropriate information-based economy and eventually fall behind in achieving proper e-government system. The e-government system in those countries need to enhance access to and delivery of government services to benefit people, help strengthen government’s drive toward effective governance and increased transparency, and better management of the country’s social and economic resources for development. The key to e-government is the establishment of a long-term dynamic strategy to fulfill the citizen needs by transforming internal operations. E-government should result in the efficiency and swift delivery and services to citizens, business, government employees and agencies. For citizens and businesses, e-government seems the simplification of procedures and streamlining of different approval processes, while for government employees and agencies, it means the facilitation of cross-agency coordination and collaboration to ensure appropriate and timely decision-making. Thus, e-government demands transformation of government procedures and redefining the process of working with people and activities relating to people. The outcome would be a societal, organizational, and technological change for the government and to its people, with IT as an enabling factor. E-government should concentrate on more efficient delivery of public services, better management of financial, human and public resources and goods at all levels of government, in particular at local level, under conditions of sustainability, participation, interoperability, increased effectiveness and transparency (EU, 2002). ICT brings pertinent sides more closely by prioritizing partnerships between the state, business and civil society. A few East European countries have became economically liberal with the high level of foreign direct investment per capita and at the same time became ICT-advanced regional leaders in terms of economic reform. These countries also present the region’s most vivid examples of partnerships and collaboration. They have clearly manifested the importance of the public-private partnerships, transparent bottom-up strategies, involvement of all stakeholders, total governmental support, capturing economic opportunities, and enabling electronic mediated businesses, responding to the challenges of globalization.
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