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Photo: BlackBoxGuild via Envato
Blog | Kōrero


Feral Cats in the Corridor: What’s Really Happening
benweatherley via iNaturalist CC BY NC With feral cats recently added to Predator Free 2050, the conversation has exploded and so has the confusion. Are feral cats just lost pets? Do they help control rats and stoats? Would removing them actually make things worse for native wildlife? This resource cuts through the noise. It explains what feral cats are, how they behave in forest and corridor landscapes, and why they pose a serious risk to kōkako and other native species. Rat

KEEP team
3 days ago


Growing Kaitiakitanga at Te Ranga School: A Year of Learning with KEEP
Forest Classroom KEEP had the amazing opportunity of working closely with ākonga (students) from Te Ranga School during 2024, delivering...

KEEP team
Feb 7


Celebrating KEEP’s Recent Achievements - 2 years on
In 2022, KEEP received generous funding from Bay Trust , which enabled us to grow from a stakeholder forum into an operational...

KEEP team
Feb 7


Numbers of Kōkako increase in Bay of Plenty
The North Island kōkako has seen increasing numbers due to concerted, long-term predator control in the Bay of Plenty. The kōkako is an...

Natalie Jessup
Aug 3, 2023
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