Our Islands, Our Selves; A History of Conservation in New Zealand

Young, David

Notes
Our Islands, Our Selves is a book for the general reader and tells the story of how a conservation ethic emerged in New Zealand. It looks at the phases of Maori settlement and how the need to preserve slowly became an element of the use of some resources. It identifies the issues, personalities and organizations of the past 200 years, as the country evolved from a quarry economy to a modern society grappling with erosion and flooding issues, predator proliferation, and habitat and species loss. As the concerns of the nation have shifted, the approaches to conservation have changed: from acclimatization of exotic species to national parks, the development of island sanctuaries and, now, an ecological approach that protects relationships as well as specific flora and fauna.
Location edition Bar Code due date
Non fiction A13167W0247
Genre:New Zealand Non-Fiction
Dewey:363.7
call #:YOU
ISBN:9781877276941
pub:2004