🔗 High-Tech Meets Low-Tech: The Ultimate Possum Eradication Team 🔗 On the Otago Peninsula, the battle against possums blends cutting-edge technology with the timeless reliability of a dog’s nose. 🐕💡 Jonah and his border terrier, Scout, are part of a powerful team combining AI, drones, and good old-fashioned tracking to find and eliminate the last remaining possums. With possums nearly gone after years of control work, Scout’s impressive ability to sniff out possum poo helps pinpoint their locations. A jar of possum scat may seem low-tech, but it’s crucial for keeping Scout sharp and on target! At the same time, Halo Project’s Kim Miller oversees AI-powered traps, which use real-time monitoring to catch only target species, making predator detection faster and more efficient. Heat-detecting drones survey the peninsula’s rugged cliffs, marking spots where possums hide—areas even Scout can’t reach. Together, these high-tech solutions and low-tech tools save time, cover more ground, and make eradication efforts more effective. Since 2018, over 60,000 possums and thousands of rats and mustelids have been removed, allowing local wildlife to flourish. The fusion of advanced AI and a skilled dog like Scout shows that sometimes the best results come from pairing high-tech innovation with simple, tried-and-true methods. Jonah says it best: “We’re gonna get to zero.” Predator Free 2050 Limited
Predator Free New Zealand Trust
Environmental Services
Wellington, WGN 3,186 followers
We are an independent charitable trust with the shared vision of a predator free Aotearoa.
About us
The Predator Free New Zealand Trust is an independent trust established in 2013. New Zealand has the highest rate of threatened species in the world. Around 81% of our birds, 88% of our reptiles and 72% of our freshwater fish are endangered. Most of our native species are not found anywhere else in the world. We are committed to dramatically reducing NZ’s predator populations, including rats, stoats, possums, feral cats, weasels and ferrets. We want to protect our native species and see their populations increase in our lifetime. It’s one of the most ambitious conservation projects undertaken in NZ – ambitious, but achievable.
- Website
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http://www.predatorfreenz.org
External link for Predator Free New Zealand Trust
- Industry
- Environmental Services
- Company size
- 2-10 employees
- Headquarters
- Wellington, WGN
- Type
- Nonprofit
- Founded
- 2013
Locations
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Primary
32 Blair Street
Level 1
Wellington, WGN 6011, NZ
Employees at Predator Free New Zealand Trust
Updates
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🎁Gift shopping for bird nerds or trappers? Need a present for an adventurer? Know someone who has everything? We've got you covered.
Gift guide 2024: presents with purpose
https://predatorfreenz.org
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“Without a framework, the challenges of kitten dumping, growing stray colonies and increasing feral cat numbers will continue. As will the predation of native birds, bats and lizards,” says Jessi Morgan, Predator Free New Zealand Trust chief executive.
Government inaction ‘a colossal missed opportunity’ in face of a ‘crisis of cats’
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Toroa (northern royal albatross) soar the skies over the sea, sleep on the waves and don’t return to land for years. When it’s time to return to solid ground, some go to Taiaroa Head at the end of the Otago Peninsula to breed and raise chicks. Last season was a record-breaker, and this year is a tie. 📷: Laura Findlay
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A new breakthrough in predator control is on the horizon — a rat-specific toxin that leaves birds, pets, and livestock unharmed. Scientists worldwide have been exploring how to make it palatable to rats. We spoke with Dr Lee Shapiro about a new norbormide formulation and method, which he believes will be “an essential new tool in the predator free toolkit.”
World first: revival of the rat-specific toxin
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With their black eye mask, ferrets might remind you of the Hamburglar. But instead of targeting hamburgers, they are adept hunters with a wide range of native birds and lizards on their menu. They are the least researched introduced predator, so what do we actually know about them?
Short-sighted surplus hunters: five fast facts about ferrets
https://predatorfreenz.org