Copyright © NCEUB 2017. The overpopulating growth attendant with high-density urban living has stressed natural landscapes in most major urban centres, devastating their rich indigenous ecologies. In the case of New Zealand, the mid-19th century colonisation saw the introduction of predators and aggressive plant species, significantly scarring and reshaping the landscape. This also devastated New Zealand's endemic ecologies, resulting in the extinction of species and loss of biodiversity. In the last 800 years, 32% of all indigenous flora and fauna have been lost. In an attempt to protect those last remaining and threatened species, a fenced sanctuary was developed in the capital city, Wellington, taking advantage of an unutilised water res...
New Zealand was once considered one of the least environmentally damaged countries in the world. Her...
New Zealanders are constantly reminded of their degraded environment and the threatened status of th...
Loss of New Zealand’s original ecosystem is the result of rapid colonisation over the past 200 years...
© 2019, © 2019 European Council of Landscape Architecture Schools (ECLAS). In the context of the hig...
Rapid urbanisation and population growth has led to the fragmentation of vital ecosystems, disconnec...
Urbanisation and the loss of nature in cities has resulted in a global biodiversity crisis and a cal...
1. The restoration of urban ecosystems is an increasingly important strategy to maintain and enhance...
Urban environments in Aotearoa, New Zealand, face a series of challenges regarding the effects of cl...
In 2006, 86% of New Zealanders lived in urban centres, a number that is expected to have risen (“Urb...
THE PROBLEMOne of the major crises facing the world today is ever increasing biodiversity loss; the ...
This article presents ways to rethink current approaches to protected areas in New Zealand, which ha...
Internationally, from 1850 to 1960 European colonization and urbanization transformed landscapes and...
In New Zealand, over 87% of the population currently resides in cities. Urban trees can face a myria...
Biodiversity is the basis of life on the planet Earth. Without biodiversity, ecosystems and the life...
Species diversity is a very important component of a healthy ecosystem, and a necessary condition fo...
New Zealand was once considered one of the least environmentally damaged countries in the world. Her...
New Zealanders are constantly reminded of their degraded environment and the threatened status of th...
Loss of New Zealand’s original ecosystem is the result of rapid colonisation over the past 200 years...
© 2019, © 2019 European Council of Landscape Architecture Schools (ECLAS). In the context of the hig...
Rapid urbanisation and population growth has led to the fragmentation of vital ecosystems, disconnec...
Urbanisation and the loss of nature in cities has resulted in a global biodiversity crisis and a cal...
1. The restoration of urban ecosystems is an increasingly important strategy to maintain and enhance...
Urban environments in Aotearoa, New Zealand, face a series of challenges regarding the effects of cl...
In 2006, 86% of New Zealanders lived in urban centres, a number that is expected to have risen (“Urb...
THE PROBLEMOne of the major crises facing the world today is ever increasing biodiversity loss; the ...
This article presents ways to rethink current approaches to protected areas in New Zealand, which ha...
Internationally, from 1850 to 1960 European colonization and urbanization transformed landscapes and...
In New Zealand, over 87% of the population currently resides in cities. Urban trees can face a myria...
Biodiversity is the basis of life on the planet Earth. Without biodiversity, ecosystems and the life...
Species diversity is a very important component of a healthy ecosystem, and a necessary condition fo...
New Zealand was once considered one of the least environmentally damaged countries in the world. Her...
New Zealanders are constantly reminded of their degraded environment and the threatened status of th...
Loss of New Zealand’s original ecosystem is the result of rapid colonisation over the past 200 years...