This project was initiated in May 1999 with the aim of determining optimum rearing conditions to breed Lyperobius huttoni in captivity. The programme has been relatively unsuccessful with only a single individual reared in captivity during 2001. However, some highly relevant information has been accumulated over the last three years and is summarised in this report.The contract for this research is: Investigation No 327
Human alteration of islands has made restoration a key part of conservation management. As islands a...
The 9 year ‘MaxClover’ experiment at Lincoln University concluded that ryegrass and white clover pas...
Human alteration of islands has made restoration a key part of conservation management. As islands a...
This project was initiated in May 1999 with the aim of determining optimum rearing conditions to bre...
© 2015 The Entomological Society of New Zealand Captive rearing can be a successful short-term strat...
Three areas near Burkes Pass Scenic Reserve were surveyed for the presence of Hadramphus tuberculatu...
Kiwi species, once abundant throughout New Zealand, are now confined to remnant forest patches, nati...
The critically endangered weevil, Hadramphus tuberculatus (Pascoe 1877), was considered extinct unti...
Argentine stem weevil (ASW) Listronotus bonariensis (Kuschel) is an introduced species that attacks ...
A rearing method was developed to facilitate the study of the soil inhabiting stages of Sitona weevi...
Figure 8 is re-used with the publisher's permission.In 2004 and 2006 flightless endemic flax weevils...
Since the advent of European settlement in New Zealand, grassland farmng has dominated the landscap...
Some aspects of the ecology of the pollinating weevil of oil palm, Elaeidobius kamerunicus Faust - ...
The endangered monophagous coxella weevil, Hadramphus spinipennis (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) is co...
The northern hairy-nosed wombat Lasiorhinus krefftii, one of Australia's most critically endangered ...
Human alteration of islands has made restoration a key part of conservation management. As islands a...
The 9 year ‘MaxClover’ experiment at Lincoln University concluded that ryegrass and white clover pas...
Human alteration of islands has made restoration a key part of conservation management. As islands a...
This project was initiated in May 1999 with the aim of determining optimum rearing conditions to bre...
© 2015 The Entomological Society of New Zealand Captive rearing can be a successful short-term strat...
Three areas near Burkes Pass Scenic Reserve were surveyed for the presence of Hadramphus tuberculatu...
Kiwi species, once abundant throughout New Zealand, are now confined to remnant forest patches, nati...
The critically endangered weevil, Hadramphus tuberculatus (Pascoe 1877), was considered extinct unti...
Argentine stem weevil (ASW) Listronotus bonariensis (Kuschel) is an introduced species that attacks ...
A rearing method was developed to facilitate the study of the soil inhabiting stages of Sitona weevi...
Figure 8 is re-used with the publisher's permission.In 2004 and 2006 flightless endemic flax weevils...
Since the advent of European settlement in New Zealand, grassland farmng has dominated the landscap...
Some aspects of the ecology of the pollinating weevil of oil palm, Elaeidobius kamerunicus Faust - ...
The endangered monophagous coxella weevil, Hadramphus spinipennis (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) is co...
The northern hairy-nosed wombat Lasiorhinus krefftii, one of Australia's most critically endangered ...
Human alteration of islands has made restoration a key part of conservation management. As islands a...
The 9 year ‘MaxClover’ experiment at Lincoln University concluded that ryegrass and white clover pas...
Human alteration of islands has made restoration a key part of conservation management. As islands a...