North Taranaki Midweek

Record nature encounters on online project

- YVETTE BATTEN

Project Hotspot is taking off.

It’s an online research project where the public keeps an eye out for orca, little blue penguin, reef heron, and the New Zealand fur seal and then reports sightings, ideally including photograph­s.

‘‘Taranaki provides valuable habitat for quite a few different threatened species but it’s important that we know about these species and where they are in order to protect them,’’ Taranaki Regional Council marine ecologist and project leader Emily Roberts said.

‘‘It’s to capture that local knowledge, to value that local knowledge so we’re using a citizen science platform called NatureWatc­h NZ to collect the sightings.’’

This project already involves schools and is supported by scientists and community groups.

It started eight months ago with a cash injection from the government’s Curious Minds initiative of $20,000, which has gone towards building the website and funding science specialist­s’ time.

More recently the project was given a further $20,000 to take the programme to South Taranaki schools.

Anyone can use the informatio­n gathered, from conservati­on groups, to decision makers in environmen­tal regulation or even oil-spill response teams.

Roberts will speak about the project at the Nga Motu Marine Society’s annual meeting, to be held on July 29 at the Val Deakin Dance Centre at 7.30pm.

‘‘It’s our annual public event really and we always have a good guest speaker and we update everybody on what the marine reserve society’s been up to for the past year,’’ society chairwoman Anne Scott said.

Project Hotspot is the society’s newest drive and it spring-boards off the Experienci­ng Marine Reserves programme run in schools.

‘‘Taranaki’s very wild and windy and it’s not so easy for children to come back from their snorkellin­g experience up north in Leigh Marine Reserve and snorkel safely in Taranaki. They come back and do a home-based action project on marine protection.

‘‘The hotspot project has enabled them to do home-based projects using the citizen science of technology so that’s been great for them, our programme and great for ongoing marine education and awareness, and protection,’’ Scott said.

 ?? YVETTE BATTEN/FAIRFAX NZ ?? Project Hotspot leader Dr Emily Roberts and Nga Motu Marine Society chairwoman Anne Scott.
YVETTE BATTEN/FAIRFAX NZ Project Hotspot leader Dr Emily Roberts and Nga Motu Marine Society chairwoman Anne Scott.

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