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Browse our conservation projects and reserves.
The nursery is a joint project of Wellington and Lower Hutt Branches and supported by Greater Wellington. It was officially opened on 30 July 2021.
This volunteer group manages 500 hectares of native forest in the Kaimai Mamaku Conservation Park, between Tauranga and Katikati.
The Branch operates a native shrub and tree nursery in Hastings. Volunteers meet at the Nursery most Tuesday mornings caring for plants propagated from seed sourced by the volunteers.
This is an assisted regeneration project where teams of volunteers work to enhance the natural habitat through:
Paremata Flats Reserve is a publicly-owned area, under the jurisdiction of Nelson City Council, encompassing tidal, river and land biodiversity systems.
The vision for our native planting projects is to create an environment alongside our local waterways that supports aquatic and terrestrial life.
Pearl Creek (off Cotterell Road, Appleby, access from the Great Taste Trail cycle path) is a spring-fed stream that flows into the Waimeha/Waimea Inlet. It was part of the extensive Waimea delta system, now fragmented by different land uses in
The Tuff Crater Restoration Project is restoring the area surrounding an extinct volcano in Northcote, Auckland.
The Hastings-Havelock North Branch worked with Hawke’s Bay Regional Council to restore the banks of the Poukawa Stream which drains wetlands that form the Pekapeka Regional Park.
In 2002, a group of volunteers from the Rotorua Branch of Forest & Bird, and the Rotorua Botanical Society started a project to remove animal and plant pests from a large part of the Lake Tikitapu Scenic Reserve and the nearby lakeside strip at Lake
Forest & Bird’s Waitakere branch is restoring Te Henga wetland in West Auckland by removing pest species and re-introducing native wildlife.
A project to clear exotic and invasive pest plants, abandoned cars, and household rubbish from a neglected Department of Conservation reserve.
Supporting Forest & Bird is one of the best things you can do for New Zealand's environment. We need people like you to support us, so that nature will always have a voice.
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