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Our Changing World

with Alison Ballance & Veronika Meduna

Thursdays 9-10pm, repeated at 1:05am Sundays. Two features play at 3:35pm on Mondays and Thursdays.

Audio from Thursday 18 December 2008

Not all audio is available due to copyright restrictions.

21:06 New Zealand's Rarest Breeding Bird

Alison Ballance heads out to a Northland beach to find New Zealand fairy terns, our rarest birds. (13′46″)

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21:20 Kokako on Tiritiri Matangi Island

Tertia Thurley and Morag Fordham search for kokako nests on the island sanctuary. (11′36″)

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21:36 Kokako dialects

A team of biologists explain the rich repertoire of regional kokako dialects. (11′02″)

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21:46 How Mice Came to New Zealand

Waikato university scientists Carolyn King and Chrissen Gemmill trace the origins and migration of house mice in New Zealand. (13′06″)

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Thursdays 9 - 10pm

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Our Changing World team.

On This Programme

4Fairy tern warden Anja Meduna, left, volunteer Claire Burt and Department of Conservation ranger Abby Meagher, right, look out for nests along the beach at Waipu Cove, one of four breeding areas for New Zealand fairy terns.

1With a population of only 35-40 birds, the New Zealand fairy tern, or tara-iti, is our rarest breeding bird. But it is probably also the least known, despite the fact that it breeds on some of Northland's most popular beaches. The main threats to the breeding success of New Zealand fairy terns include habitat depletion through coastal development, predation and high tides and strong winds. If a nest is at risk of being washed away by storm, conservation staff will take the terns' eggs to an incubator at the Auckland Zoo and replace them with wax-filled dummy eggs (pictured on left). Alison Ballance meets Department of Conservation staff and volunteers looking after the birds at Waipu Cove. Find out more about New Zealand fairy terns and DOC's conservation efforts.

4

Kokako are one of the world's most beautiful songsters. They belong to the ancient endemic family of wattlebirds, together with North Island and South Island saddlebacks and the extinct huia. The kokako is the only member of its family still surviving on the mainland.

2In the fourth episode of the Tiritiri Matangi series, Alison Ballance joins volunteer Tertia Thurley (pictured on right) on a kokako nest hunt and catches up with Morag Fordham to find out more about the history of these birds. Then, Veronika Meduna meets a team of biologists at the universities of Waikato and Lincoln to find out about the kokako's large repertoire of dialects and what role they may play for the birds.

4

Laura Molles, of Lincoln University, tracking kokako.

How come house mice on the Chatham Islands are most closely related to an Asian strain? Mammal expert Carolyn King and evolutionary biologist Chrissen Gemmill, at the University of Waikato, have traced the origins of mice in New Zealand and found that ship wrecks and trading boats may have brought the rodents to New Zealand some time before the first settlers arrived.

Books on Our Changing World

Listen to other book-related interviews broadcast earlier this year:

Chatham Islands - Heritage and Conservation, edited by Colin Miskelly, published in association with the Department of Conservation by Canterbury University Press.

Going Bush, by Kirstie Ross, published by Auckland University Press.

The Amazing World of James Hector, by Simon Nathan and Mary Varnham (eds.), published by Awa Press.

Plant Me Instead, a Department of Conservation book that gives home gardeners and landscapers suggestions of native and exotic plant species that can be used in the lower North Island as alternatives to weeds.

The Awa Book of New Zealand Science, edited by Rebecca Priestley, published by Awa Press.

Cradle to Cradle, by William McDonough and Michael Braungart, published by North Point Press.

Acid Song, by Bernard Beckett, published by Longacre Press.

Albatross: Their World, Their Ways, by Tui de Roy, Mark Jones, Julian Fitter, published by David Bateman.

The Natural History of Canterbury, edited by M Winterbourn, G Knox, C Burrows and I Marsden, published by Canterbury University Press.

We also featured an interview about Music 4 Mauis, a compilation of songs to save a species.


The Team

Presenters:

Photo of Alison Ballance

Alison Ballance

Photo of Ruth Beran

Ruth Beran

Photo of Veronika Meduna

Veronika Meduna

About Our Changing World

A mix of in depth interviews, packages and sound rich features, Our Changing World covers topics across all scientific disciplines, natural history and environmental issues, and developments in health as well as exploring the human side of science and the personalities behind it.

email: ourchangingworld@radionz.co.nz
Phone: (04) 4741910

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