Skip to content
Predator Free NZ Trust
Get involved in backyard trapping
Search for:
Search
Get involved
Find a group
Backyards and neighbourhoods
How to identify backyard predators
Start backyard trapping
Make your garden safe for wildlife
Rat proof your compost bin
Get the neighbours involved
Farms, rural and bush
Kids and schools
Spread the word
Toolkits
Know your target predators
Group toolkit
Start a group
Management and communication
Fundraising
Funding and grants
Governance
Add your group to the national map
Trapping and baiting toolkit
To trap or bait?
Backyards and neighbourhoods
Farms
Lifestyle blocks
Bush and large areas
Trap, bait and equipment tips
Schools toolkit
Get kids involved
Lesson plans and activities
Help wildlife thrive at your school
Predator control guide for schools
Native taonga
Know your target predators
Field trips and videos
Is your predator control working?
Shop
Stories and research
Latest research
Success stories
Webinars
About us
Predator Free New Zealand Trust
Our mission
Predator Free Apprentice Programme
Predator Free Communities Programme
Our research
Our events
Predator Free 2050 movement
About Predator Free 2050
History of eradication
Native taonga
Island eradication
Fenced sanctuaries
Mainland islands
Large predator control projects
National map
Contact us
Template (Duplicate me)
Home
/
Galleries
/
Template (Duplicate me)
May 16, 2023 Jaime Philips
Only after rats were eradicated from Kāpiti Island did tīeke successfully establish themselves on the island. Image credit: Duncan-Wright (via Wikimedia).
Tama Blackburn from Waitara Taiao and Māia Gibbs from Taranaki Kiwi Trust in the bush with the F-bomb. Image credit: Rewild.
Korimako drinking from a sugar water feeder. Photo credit: Alex H Weller.
Tauhou (silvereye) feed on bugs, fruit from native trees and nectar from shrubs such as kōwhai. Image credit: Jacqui Geux.
Takahē feeding. Image credit: Kathrin and Stefan Marks.
Predator Free Wellington field officer recording results on his phone. Image credit: Jim Huyleborek.
Sign up to our newsletter
*
indicates required
First name
*
Last name
*
Email address
*