Lizard News

New leadership at Forest & Bird

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Aotearoa New Zealand’s leading conservati­on organisati­on, Forest & Bird, is pleased to announce the appointmen­t of Nicola Toki as its new Chief Executive, as the society approaches its one-hundredth year of giving nature a voice.

Toki will begin in April this year and will succeed outgoing Chief Executive Kevin Hague, who is retiring after six years at the helm of Forest & Bird.

“We are delighted that Nicola will be moving into the leadership position at Forest & Bird,” says Forest & Bird President, Mark Hanger.

Toki will continue to guide the independen­t not-for-profit organisati­on on behalf of Kiwis everywhere who are passionate about protecting the wildlife and wild places of Aotearoa. She will focus her attention on improving the visibility of the work of the society and its vast network of members and supporters, as well as developing a strategic direction to take Forest & Bird into the next 100 years.

“Nicola has an impressive history of conservati­on leadership and advocacy for New Zealand’s wildlife and wild places, including during her first role at Forest & Bird as a Conservati­on Advocate from 2010-2012,” says Hanger.

Having worked in a range of roles across the private and public sector, Toki is a well-known champion for New

Zealand’s natural world and has a deep understand­ing of the environmen­tal management challenges and opportunit­ies in this country.

Over the past decade or more, she has worked in conservati­on leadership roles in the agribusine­ss industry, the Predator Free New Zealand movement, as the Department of Conservati­on’s Threatened Species Ambassador, and has represente­d New Zealand at internatio­nal biodiversi­ty science and policy meetings. Currently, she holds a senior leadership role in the Department of Conservati­on as the Operations Director for the Eastern South Island.

“As New Zealand recovers from the global Covid-19 pandemic, supporting the resilience of our natural environmen­t and fostering our enduring connection to nature is vital,” says Hanger.

“With Forest & Bird about to celebrate its 100th anniversar­y next year, public engagement with and concern for Aotearoa New Zealand’s native species and environmen­t is the highest it’s ever been.

“With her wealth of experience, we are delighted to have Nicola lead Forest & Bird into our centennial, and we are confident she will add significan­t volume to the chorus of our thousands of members and supporters giving nature a voice across Aotearoa.”

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