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reptiles and amphibians

Saving reptiles and amphibians – introduction

Article

Saving reptiles and amphibians – introduction

New Zealand’s native species evolved in isolation from other regions for millions of years after the last land bridge to ...

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Otago skink sitting on a rock

Article

Ngārara – te aitanga a Punga

Ngārara is a term commonly used as a translation for reptiles. However, its traditional meaning also includes insects. Ngārara as an animal grouping is an example ...

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Meet te mokomoko a Tohu: a new species of New Zealand gecko hidden in plain sight

Article

Meet te mokomoko a Tohu: a new species of New Zealand gecko hidden in plain sight

Exciting news for all fans of lizards (mokomoko) a new species has just been rediscovered. Te mokomoko a Tohu is Aotearoa New Zealand’s newest species of ...

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From the smallest bones come the biggest secrets

Article

From the smallest bones come the biggest secrets

Dr Nic Rawlence tells us about the amazing research by one of his students, who developed a specialised technique that allows scientists to non-destructively extract ancient ...

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Kimihia Kermit

Article

Kimihia Kermit

This article describes how students and Ngāti Mutunga teamed up with an ecologist to investigate frog populations – kimihia means to look for – in the ...

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Saving reptiles and amphibians – key terms

Article

Saving reptiles and amphibians – key terms

What’s unique about our native reptiles and amphibians, and why are they at risk? Learn more about the science behind conservation efforts for them here in ...

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Heat foils frog fungus

Article

Heat foils frog fungus

Chytridiomycosis, a disease caused by the amphibian chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd), has caused declines and, more depressingly, extinctions in amphibian populations around the world. However, ...

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Saving reptiles and amphibians – writer insight

Article

Saving reptiles and amphibians – writer insight

Cath Battersby In May 2009, I visited Otago University and met with 3 scientists who had expressed an interest in getting involved with the Science Learning ...

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Professor Phil Bishop (1957–2021)

Article

Professor Phil Bishop (1957–2021)

Position: University Professor, University of Otago. Field: Conservation biology. Dr Phil Bishop was a professor and head of the zoology department at the University of Otago. ...

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Tuatara

Article

Tuatara

New Zealand’s endemic tuatara is a very unusual animal. They are the only living representative of a group of reptiles known as Rhynchocephalia (sometimes known in ...

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Native frogs

Article

Native frogs

Frogs are vertebrates and belong to the class Amphibia. They are the only amphibians naturally occurring in New Zealand. All frogs have delicate, semi-permeable skin that ...

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Dr Kelly Hare

Article

Dr Kelly Hare

Position: Scholarships Manager, University of Waikato. Previously a postdoctoral researcher, University of Otago. Field: Zoology. When we first met Dr Kelly Hare in 2010, she was ...

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Professor Alison Cree

Article

Professor Alison Cree

Position: Emeritus Professor, Department of Zoology, University of Otago. Field: Zoology and herpetology. Dr Alison Cree was a professor in the Department of Zoology at the ...

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Native skinks and geckos

Article

Native skinks and geckos

Skinks and geckos are the only 2 native families of lizard found in Aotearoa New Zealand (note that tuatara are not lizards). They are vertebrates and ...

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Captive management for conservation

Article

Captive management for conservation

Captive management is where animals are kept in captivity in some sort of enclosed space to assist survival of their species. This might be in a ...

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Threats to native reptiles and amphibians

Article

Threats to native reptiles and amphibians

All of our reptiles and amphibians are fully protected by law. It is illegal to collect skinks and geckos, and you need a special permit to ...

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Saving reptiles and amphibians – question bank

Article

Saving reptiles and amphibians – question bank

An inquiry approach is a method often used in science education. The question bank provides an initial list of questions about saving reptiles and amphibians and ...

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Captive management of skinks

Article

Captive management of skinks

While employed as a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Otago, Dr Kelly Hare looked at how captive management regimes could influence the health of ...

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Tuatara, temperature and translocation

Article

Tuatara, temperature and translocation

Professor Alison Cree is a reproductive biologist, working in the Department of Zoology at the University of Otago. A key focus of her research is the ...

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Investigating frog disease

Article

Investigating frog disease

Aotearoa New Zealand has 4 species of native frogs that are all endemic. All 4 are threatened with extinction. A major focus of the amphibian research ...

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Saving reptiles and amphibians – timeline

Article

Saving reptiles and amphibians – timeline

This timeline provides look at some of the historical aspects of saving our reptiles and amphibians and other species, the impacts on them by humans, and ...

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A silhouette with animals and DNA and two logos

Activity

Māori knowledge of animals – local contexts

Aotearoa New Zealand is rich in animal life – from tiny pepeketua and giant wētāpunga to ngā manu a Tānemahuta and ngā ika a Tangaroa. Some ...

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Frogs for the future?

Activity

Frogs for the future?

Frogs for the future? is a ready-to-use cross curricular teaching resource. It uses the Ministry of Education’s 2019 Connected article Kimihia Kermit by Philippa Werry. Find ...

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Ethics in conservation science

Activity

Ethics in conservation science

In this activity, students consider the conservation of native frogs from a number of different perspectives. By the end of this activity, students should be able ...

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