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Environmental education

Te aki i te hunga tangata te tiaki inanga... Whitebait Connection provides an inquiry and action based environmental education programme for schools and communities focusing on the health of our streams, rivers and wetlands

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Action outcomes

Participants are inspired to take action for their local catchment including riparian restoration, fencing, stream monitoring, writing letters to government and stream/river clean ups.

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Community engagement

Since 2002, we have been raising awareness of the effects of land-use on the health of our streams, rivers, estuaries and the sea, using whitebait as a medium.

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Conservation Action

As well as supporting communities to take action for freshwater, we sometimes help to lead this action in the form of water quality monitoring, whitebait spawning habitat surveys, habitat enhancement or creation, riparian planting, fencing and pest control, fish passage barrier identification, and stormwater litter monitoring.

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Bay of Islands International Academy Programme, 2022

In term 3 of 2022, Whitebait Connection Programme Coordinator Rosie delivered a programme to Bay of Islands International Academy. This programme included a field trip to the Kapiro Stream as part of the students stream investigation.

Here are the results of the investigation: 

  • Habitat Assessment: The students noticed the stream was shaded and there was a good root system for native plants to keep the bank together
  • Temperature: 15-19 degrees celsius 
  • Clarity: 75cm (heavy rainfall occurred a few days earlier) 
  • pH: 7 
  • Conductivity: 70-80 µS/cm
  • Macroinvertebrates: mosquito larvae, worms, snails, water boatmen, diving beetles, woody cased caddisflies, damselfly larvae
  • Fish: īnanga, common bullies, gambusia (pest) 

 

Overall, the Kapiro Stream appeared to be in great condition. The electrical conductivity, temperature, water clarity and pH were all within the healthy range for freshwater. The habitat assessment was excellent, with lots of native trees growing along this stretch of the bank and instream water features to support aquatic creatures. The trees will prevent erosion and provide cooler water for freshwater creatures during summer.