logo
Colossal Biosciences Plans To Resurrect The South Island Giant Moa

Colossal Biosciences Plans To Resurrect The South Island Giant Moa

Scoop08-07-2025
July 8 2025 AT 1 PM EST // JULY 9, 2025 AT 5AM NZST, TE WAIPOUNAMU/SOUTH ISLAND, NEW ZEALAND:
The Ngāi Tahu Research Centre has entered into a strategic partnership with de-extinction company, Colossal Biosciences, and Sir Peter Jackson, to resurrect the South Island Giant Moa and other Taonga Species.
The Ngāi Tahu Research Centre coordinated project aims to advance ecological restoration and develop tools for conservation in Te Waipounamu, New Zealand's South Island
In a historic indigenous-coordinated initiative, the Ngāi Tahu Research Centre has entered into a collaboration with Colossal Biosciences, a Texas-based genetic engineering and de-extinction company, and acclaimed filmmaker Sir Peter Jackson, to work together to resurrect the extinct South Island Giant Moa.
The Ngāi Tahu Research Centre was established in 2011 to support the intellectual growth and development of Ngāi Tahu, the principal iwi (Māori tribe) of the southern region of New Zealand. A multi-disciplinary hub based at the University of Canterbury, the Ngāi Tahu Research Centre will direct all aspects of this project. This extends longstanding Ngāi Tahu involvement with species protection and ecological restoration and builds on the Research Centre's strong record of international collaboration.
The partners aim to place Māori values, cultural heritage, and ecological knowledge at the centre of de-extinction and species preservation efforts, thereby producing a world-leading model of scientific collaboration with indigenous people. In doing so, Ngai Tahu communities and whānau (families) will have opportunities to help guide this project: from laboratory research to conservation planning and implementation.
This ambitious partnership, which integrates mātauranga Māori (traditional knowledge) with advanced genetic engineering to support ecological restoration and revolutionary conservation tools for taonga (treasured) species, signals a new era of indigenous leadership in scientific innovation. Moreover, the technology will be open sourced and available to anyone who wants to use it for conservation purposes at the direction of the Ngāi Tahu Research Centre.
Colossal Biosciences has committed a large investment to New Zealand to build biotechnology within and protect its unique biological heritage, including flora and fauna found nowhere else on Earth. New Zealand is a biodiversity hotspot due to its isolation and natural history, with a high proportion of endemic species. Colossal:
Is already applying its genetic engineering tools and end-to-end de-extinction pipeline to restore the moa from extinction.
Will sequence and rebuild the genomes for all nine moa species, which has already begun. Researching the genomes of all moa species is valuable for informing conservation efforts and understanding the role of climate change and human activity in biodiversity loss.
Will develop additional genetic studies across related bird species - creating reference genomes and using computational tools to compare the genomics of each species across the entire order of dinornithiformes and several of their closest living relatives including tinamous and emus.
Will develop a conservation assessment and risk evaluation report that will include a feasibility analysis, a conservation action plan to address drivers of extinction, and identify potential rewilding sites for the restored moas.
Will, alongside these technological approaches, work with its partners to undertake ecological restoration projects throughout the Ngāi Tahu takiwā (domain). These initiatives will focus on rehabilitating potential moa habitat while supporting existing native species, guided by Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK).
Will be directed by Ngāi Tahu Research Centre experts in the development of cutting-edge conservation initiatives including genome sequencing and biobanking for taonga (treasured) species beyond the moa. This work will create a genetic repository of culturally significant plants and animals, safeguarding biodiversity while building indigenous capacity in conservation biotechnology.
Will provide funding, resources, and expertise to whānau-led expeditions to locate and sample taonga species to be included in a regional biobank located within the ngai Tahu takiwā (domain).
Will develop economic models for species preservation including ecotourism opportunities and carbon credit modeling to create sustainable sources of revenue for communities across Te Waipounamu/the South Island.
Will work closely to ensure the work builds opportunities and capability in New Zealand – especially for Te Waipounamu/the South Island, and Māori youth.
Will create educational programming and curricula highlighting these cutting-edge technologies to educate and inspire Ngāi Tahu youth to pursue careers in the STEM fields.
Will develop capacity building opportunities for Ngāi Tahu whānau to work alongside Colossal scientists working on de-extinction, conservation sciences, and biobanking with the vision of standing up laboratories and science centers within the Ngāi Tahu takiwā (domain).
Has already made steps to create Colossal Labs New Zealand, a subsidiary of the company and all data, technology, and research will be provided directly to the Ngāi Tahu Research Centre.
Colossal scientists recently joined Ngāi Tahu archaeologist Kyle Davis on a visit to caves and other sites known to contain significant moa subfossil deposits within the Ngāi Tahu takiwā. Davis remarked, 'our earliest ancestors in this place lived alongside moa and our records, both archaeological and oral, contain knowledge about these birds and their environs. We relish the prospect of bringing that into dialogue with Colossal's cutting-edge science as part of a bold vision for ecological restoration.'
Director of the Ngāi Tahu Research Centre, Professor Mike Stevens similarly notes that moa harvesting was one of the things that transformed tropical East Polynesian explorers into subtropical South Polynesia Māori. 'During the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, moa provided meat for sustenance, and bones and feathers for tools and decoration, especially in Te Waipounamu. And the loss of moa, through over-harvesting and habitat modification, was a salutary lesson as to the New Zealand archipelago's 'fragile plenty'.' Stevens further comments that, 'we Ngāi Tahu have successfully partnered with the New Zealand government over many decades to protect and enhance endangered species, especially bird species. However, we are particularly excited by this project because of the extent to which it enables us to exercise our
rangatiratanga (leadership) and tikanga (customs) and the potential to bring ecological and economic aspirations into a singular frame. We also see huge importance in this technology as we enter the Anthropocene.'
Collaborating scientist Paul Scofield, Senior Curator Natural History at Canterbury Museum, and an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Earth and Environment at the University of Canterbury says, 'The gigantic moa were a cornerstone of Aotearoa/New Zealand ecosystems. Colossal Biosciences and the Ngāi Tahu Research Centre are providing New Zealand conservationists with an unprecedented opportunity to recreate lost taonga (treasured) moa species. This Ngāi Tahu Research Centre-led initiative will drive new historical, ecological, and scientific discoveries on the path to recreating moa. The knowledge gained will be beneficial to all of New Zealand, to conservation, and the world.' Scofield has over thirty years of experience in conservation and avian palaeobiology in New Zealand, the Antarctic, Arctic, central Pacific and Caribbean and is one of the leading moa researchers and curator of the largest collection of moa bones in the world.
Ben Lamm, CEO and co-founder of Colossal Biosciences, thanked Peter Jackson for bringing all the parties together and expressed enthusiasm about supporting the initiative: 'We are honored to contribute our advanced computational and genetic engineering capabilities under the direction of the Ngāi Tahu Research Centre. This partnership represents a new model where indigenous leadership guides scientific endeavors, recognizing that traditional ecological knowledge and cultural context are essential to responsible de-extinction and species preservation efforts. There is so much knowledge that will be unlocked and shared on the journey to bring back the iconic moa."
'I'm delighted to partner with the Ngāi Tahu Research Centre and Colossal Biosciences on a mission to save some of our most precious taonga. Resources will be put into ensuring some of the most critically endangered species in Aotearoa/New Zealand are protected for future generations,' said Sir Peter Jackson, the acclaimed filmmaker and proud New Zealander who previously invested in Colossal's de-extinction projects. 'With the recent resurrection of the dire wolf, Colossal has also made real the possibility of bringing back lost species. There's a lot of science still to be done – but we can start looking forward to the day when birds like the moa or the huia are rescued from the darkness of extinction. Exciting times lay ahead! Even the journey will bring incredible insights about the history of this land and enrich discussions as to the potential nature of our future here.'
About the Moa
Moa were flightless birds endemic to New Zealand that went extinct approximately 600 years ago, approximately two centuries after Polynesian settlement. These remarkable birds, which consisted of nine distinct species, ranged from turkey-sized species to the South Island Giant
Moa (Dinornis robustus) which stood up to 3.6 meters tall with neck outstretched and weighed approximately 230 kilograms.
As large herbivores, moa played crucial ecological roles in New Zealand's forests and grasslands for millions of years. Their browsing habits shaped vegetation structure and composition, while their seed dispersal activities influenced plant distribution patterns. The extinction of moa resulted in significant changes to New Zealand's ecosystems, creating cascading effects still evident today.
Recent research has shown that moa populations were stable until human arrival, with extinction occurring within a century of Polynesian settlement, primarily due to hunting and habitat change. This rapid extinction represents one of the most well-documented examples of human impact on megafauna.
'The first time I flew over New Zealand's South Island, I was captivated by the breathtaking landscapes,' said Robert Nelson, renowned biotechnology investor and Managing Director of ARCH Venture Partners, who has also provided financial support for the project. 'I remember hearing incredible stories about the moa – these extraordinary giant birds that once roamed these valleys. My immediate thought was simply, 'if the Māori people want them back, we should do everything in our power to support their wishes.' It just felt like one of those projects that needed the right collaboration to make happen. I'm excited to support this ambitious scientific endeavor that connects New Zealand's past with its future.'
The Māori-Directed De-extinction Approach
Dr. Beth Shapiro, Colossal's Chief Science Officer and renowned evolutionary biologist specializing in ancient DNA, emphasized the scientific and ecological value of the Māori-led approach: 'This partnership represents an unprecedented opportunity to combine indigenous ecological knowledge with genomic technology to better understand not just the moa, but the entire ecosystem they inhabited. By studying ancient DNA, we can gain insights into how these keystone species shaped New Zealand's unique biodiversity and apply these lessons to strengthen the resilience of modern ecosystems facing climate change and habitat loss.'
The partnership will follow a deliberate, step-by-step methodology that respects scientific rigor while reflecting Māori values and traditional ecological knowledge. This phased approach begins with expeditions to recover ancient DNA and genomic analysis, followed by gene identification and functional characterization, biological inference from genomic data, and the development of reproductive technologies. Various advancements including deeper comparative genomics across multiple bird families, new PGC culture conditions, interspecies surrogacy, and artificial egg membranes will all advance the next generation conservation toolkits for species preservation of additional taonga (treasured) species. In parallel, the project will incorporate animal husbandry expertise focused on related avian species to better understand developmental requirements and behavioral patterns that would inform any future restoration efforts.
Dr. Anna Keyte, Avian Species Director at Colossal Biosciences, shared her enthusiasm for the collaborative work ahead: 'Working with Ngāi Tahu experts to develop technologies that support moa restoration is an incredible scientific opportunity with profound cultural significance. The avian genomics team is particularly excited to apply our expertise in ways that honor Māori values while advancing conservation science. The technologies we develop together on the path to moa de-extinction will have immediate applications for conservation of existing threatened bird species across Aotearoa/New Zealand.'
Educational and Economic Opportunities
Beyond the scientific and ecological dimensions, the Ngāi Tahu Research Centre, along with the Canterbury Museum, both located in Christchurch, New Zealand, are looking to create sustainable economic opportunities to benefit Ngāi Tahu and the wider Te Waipounamu/South Island community. As part of its contribution to the overall project, the Ngāi Tahu Research Centre will explore how best to develop Ngāi Tahu-owned and operated ecotourism ventures and research facilities that showcase Māori leadership in conservation innovation.
The project will also establish educational programs that critically engage with Ngāi Tahu knowledge systems and offer fresh thinking about their relationship with relevant scientific concepts. These programs will ensure that understandings of the moa, and its potential return to the Ngāi Tahu landscape, are grounded in Māori perspectives. These programs will be developed and delivered by Māori researchers and educators, with a view to creating sustainable employment pathways.
For more information please visit https://colossal.com/moa/
ABOUT THE NGĀI TAHU RESEARCH CENTRE
Established in 2011, the multi-disciplinary Ngāi Tahu Research Centre will gather relevant cultural and ecological knowledge pertaining to moa, and the landscapes they once roamed, as part of its offering to this partnership. The Centre's central role in this project will set a new global benchmark for indigenous leadership in scientific innovation and ecological restoration.
ABOUT COLOSSAL BIOSCIENCES
Colossal was founded by emerging technology and software entrepreneur Ben Lamm and world-renowned geneticist and serial biotech entrepreneur George Church, Ph.D., and is the first to apply CRISPR technology for the purposes of species de-extinction. Colossal creates innovative technologies for species restoration, critically endangered species protection and the repopulation of critical ecosystems that support the continuation of life on Earth. Colossal is accepting humanity's duty to restore Earth to a healthier state, while also solving for the future economies and biological necessities of the human condition through cutting-edge science and technologies. To follow along, please visit: www.colossal.com
ABOUT CANTERBURY MUSEUM
Canterbury Museum is the largest museum in Te Waipounamu/the South Island of New Zealand. It holds the largest collection of moa remains in the world. The museum's founder, Sir Julius von Haast, was instrumental in building this collection, often exchanging moa bones with overseas museums to acquire other valuable artifacts and specimens. These exchanges, alongside extensive local excavations, made it the pivotal institution for understanding the biology of these gigantic extinct birds.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Raising The Bar Serves Up Fresh Thinking In Auckland Pubs
Raising The Bar Serves Up Fresh Thinking In Auckland Pubs

Scoop

time2 days ago

  • Scoop

Raising The Bar Serves Up Fresh Thinking In Auckland Pubs

Press Release – University of Auckland With 20 talks held across ten bars in Aucklands CBD on one night, Raising the Bar gives alumni and the general public a chance to directly engage with top academics from the University of Auckland, all while enjoying their favourite drop. Raising the Bar is back, pouring the University of Auckland's most fascinating and future-shaping research straight into bars across the inner city Among the topics on the menu at this year's event on August 26 are the power of urban design to create and connect communities, how cutting-edge science is personalising health treatment like never before, the science of safer drug use and why big tech's unchecked AI development is a code red for democracy. With 20 talks held across ten bars in Auckland's CBD on one night, Raising the Bar gives alumni and the general public a chance to directly engage with top academics from the University of Auckland, all while enjoying their favourite drop. 'At its heart, Raising the Bar is about making research real and relevant,' says Mark Bentley, Director of Alumni Relations and Development at the University of Auckland. 'These talks bring important ideas into everyday spaces, sparking conversations about health, technology, culture and more – conversations that extend far beyond the University.' Originally launched in New York in 2013, Raising the Bar is now a global initiative – and the University of Auckland has proudly brought the event to local audiences since 2017. This year's talks will be held at bars across Auckland's CBD, including in Wynyard Quarter, Victoria Park and City Works Depot. Each venue will host two sessions, starting at 6pm and 8pm, with punters free to move from one bar to another to catch their preferred talks. All talks are free, but with the event expected to sell out early registration is recommended. Visit to register your place now. This year's full line-up: Merryn Tawhai – Reimagining healthcare with human digital twins Rhys Ponton – From lab coats to late nights: the science of safer drug use Simon Young – Broken knees, bionic fixes and the rise of robot surgeons David Krofcheck – Out of this world: the smallest and most surprising liquid in the Universe Justin O'Sullivan – Swab, sequence, surprise! How science is personalising your health Mohsen Mohammadzadeh – Robo-rides and city life: what could go right…or wrong? Andrew Erueti – The limits of liberal equality and the future of Māori self-determination Christina Stringer – Closer than you think: migrant exploitation and modern slavery in Aotearoa Olaf Diegel – 3D printing the future Darren Svirskis – The quest to find a cure for spinal cord injury Claire Meehan: Not just jokes: how misogyny online is shaping teen culture Alexandra Andhov – Code red for democracy: when big tech becomes bigger than government Sophie Tomlinson – 'Tragical-comical-historical-pastoral': Shakespeare's Cymbeline Marcelo Rodriguez Ferrere – We know animals are sentient. What does that mean for their legal status? Chris Ogden – Global authoritarianism: how to spot it and how to stop it Joel Rindelaub – Breathing plastic: Aotearoa's invisible pollution problem Antje Fiedler – Rewriting the playbook: how Kiwi businesses can thrive in a changing world Lee Beattie – Beyond buildings: urban design's power to create and connect communities Laura Burn – A human history of looking up: from stargazing to space lasers Tom Allen – A carbon fibre yarn: weaving fossil fuel roots into a sustainable future

University building AI tool to help te reo Māori learners with real time pronunciation feedback
University building AI tool to help te reo Māori learners with real time pronunciation feedback

RNZ News

time2 days ago

  • RNZ News

University building AI tool to help te reo Māori learners with real time pronunciation feedback

The University of Auckland, Photo: RNZ / Yiting Lin Auckland University is building a new AI tool that will give te reo Māori learners real time, personalised feedback on their pronunciation. The three-year project is funded with a $1 million research grant from the Ministry of Business and Innovation's Smart Ideas. Head of Auckland Universities' Te Puna Wananga, Dr Piata Allen told Checkpoint the idea is to give te reo Māori learners confidence so they use more te reo more of the time. Allen (Ngāti Kahungunu, Ngāti Hinemanu, Ngā Wairiki Ngāti Apa) said the AI tool will give real time feedback to users who are speaking te reo Māori and give feedback on the specific sounds they are making. "When you pronounce sounds you are... making different shapes with your mouth, you are positioning your tongue differently to make different sounds, so in order to make the sounds you want to make you've got to get those things right and what the app is going to do is to help you understand what the sounds are that you might be struggling with and how to correct that." The te reo Māori 'R' sound is one that can cause new learners some trouble, she said. "Quite commonly we say that you need to roll your Rs, however in te reo Māori actually the R sound is a tap or a flap. Which is quite similar to the sound you make when you say words like Daddy, Maddie, Paddy, those types of sounds, so you get that double d sound, that tap, you just tap the roof of your mouth once." Allen said the app will be able to explain to people the movement they need to make in order to get the sound they are trying to make and how to adjust. "Rather than just tell people that this is right and that is wrong we are able to give them a bit more specific feedback." Currently Auckland University runs an an online pronunciation course where students record themselves reading a bilingual text then switch between pronunciation, the tutors then listen to the sounds they are making and give them feedback on a syllable basis, she said. "That's quite labour intensive and quite time intensive and we aren't able to scale that as widely as we'd like, so incorporating AI into that process means we're able to give more people access." Allen said that giving feedback on articulation of sounds is a specific skill that people need to be trained in to do effectively. The language model will be trained on the existing repository of recorded te reo, such as from the archives of iwi radio stations, she said. "So we do have a significant repository of te reo Māori sounds, however what we will need to do is train a model around the acceptable range of pronunciation that we are looking for, because there is always going to be a range with language." When it comes to training a language model some sort of framework is needed in order to train the model, Allen said, so the first thing to do is establish what the range is for te reo Māori. The project is running for three years and Allen said they have that to establish te range of correct pronunciation, to develop the feedback tool, to test it with a group of users and to look at how it can be scaled from there. "We want to have as many people using the tool as possible, so we really want it to be available far and wide, exactly how we scale that we haven't quite worked that through yet, we're just going to be focussing on the research at this stage but then as we progress through the project we'll be looking at how we can scale it." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Geothermal Strategy can be catalyst for transformational change
Geothermal Strategy can be catalyst for transformational change

Newsroom

time30-07-2025

  • Newsroom

Geothermal Strategy can be catalyst for transformational change

Opinion: The launch of the Government's draft Geothermal Strategy, 'From the Ground Up – a draft strategy to unlock New Zealand's geothermal potential', a first for our country, is a watershed moment. It signals that geothermal energy is no longer the quiet achiever in our energy system – the revived focus on its potential recognises that geothermal can be central to our national vision for a sustainable, resilient, and economically empowered future. We have worked in the geothermal sector with engineers, scientists, Māori trusts, and industry leaders for decades, here and globally, and it's clear his strategy is welcomed with enthusiasm and optimism. The direction is right. The language is ambitious. And the need is urgent. At the Geothermal Institute at the University of Auckland, we see this as more than a policy milestone – it's a long-awaited catalyst for transformational change. Hearing Ministers Shane Jones, Louise Upston and Shane Reti tell it, educating our young people and providing compelling career opportunities in geothermal needs to be at the heart of it. The importance of signals One of the most powerful aspects of the strategy is what it signals: that geothermal matters. That it has a future that can rival its storied past. That government sees the long-term opportunity and is willing to put its weight behind it. That's no small thing. As any developer or technology innovator will tell you, long-term certainty is the foundation of long-term investment. This strategy builds on tangible commitments already made – particularly in the Government's investment to accelerate research-backed supercritical geothermal technology development. This technology aims to harness extremely high-temperature fluids from deep underground to generate renewable energy more efficiently than conventional geothermal technology. That backing will keep New Zealand at the forefront of technology to tap ultra-hot geothermal fluids to produce radically more energy per well. This is complex science and engineering with high stakes and high rewards. If we get this right, we not only unlock more clean energy, but also more industrial process heat, more energy-dense sites, and more export opportunities for our solidified globally leading expertise. The ripple effects for regional economic development are significant: the creation of highly skilled, highly paid jobs in engineering, geoscience, subsurface modelling, advanced manufacturing and programme and environmental management in regions including Taupō, Kawerau and Rotorua, from Northland to the Central Volcanic Plateau. The students at the Geothermal Institute will be the first to tell you: these are real jobs that future-proof careers and bolster local economies. From field to frontier – the role of innovation, research and education Geothermal is a mature sector, but it's also a frontier sector. What struck me at the New Zealand Geothermal Week in Taupō this year wasn't just the technical excellence on display, but the dynamism. I had conversations with rangatahi curious about career pathways, with iwi-led developers eyeing up direct heat projects, with engineering consultants pitching AI-assisted reservoir models, and with international visitors in awe of the collaborative NZ Inc spirit in the room. Future skills were a strong emerging theme throughout, where the message was loud and clear: the sector is hungry for talent, and young people are hungry for purpose. We need to meet them in the middle – with curriculum pathways, internship pipelines, scholarships targeting local communities and a long-term commitment to Stem education throughout the education value chain. But building a globally competitive innovation pipeline requires sustained support. Training world-class geoscientists and engineers doesn't happen overnight. It needs the right investment and long-term partnerships. And to meet the Government's ambition to double geothermal energy use by 2040 will require scaling up education and training. That's why the strategy's success will ultimately rest not only on the high-level vision of geothermal growth, but also what sits behind it to fuel that growth. Reinforcing New Zealand's global leadership New Zealand already enjoys a stellar reputation in geothermal internationally. Our engineers and consultants are in demand in Southeast Asia, East Africa, North America, Latin America, the Pacific, Europe and beyond. Our training programmes and postgraduate education programmes have produced alumni who now lead geothermal policy development, regulation, production and scientific research on every continent. This strategy, if paired with smart investment and coordinated delivery, could elevate that leadership to the next level. We could be the first country to commercialise supercritical geothermal knowhow. We could be the global centre for geothermal workforce training, standards and certification. We could supercharge the export of integrated geothermal solutions, from power plant designs and drilling capability to stakeholder partnering frameworks, carbon capture innovations, critical minerals extraction, cutting-edge digital modelling and real-time assessment tools, and more. This is the soft power of geothermal – and it's rooted in decades of practical excellence, technical ingenuity, and manaakitanga. A call to action The Government's draft Geothermal Strategy establishes a clear framework for the growth of geothermal. At the launch this week, ministers set a challenge for our geothermal community to turn it into a bold, coherent vision for the future. The geothermal sector is ready – meeting challenges is what we do.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store