Birds of a feather: Sarah Rewi brings together Mātauranga Māori and science for the muttonbird
Ruffling feathers in all the right ways is Sarah Rewi, a young researcher blending Mātauranga Māori and Western science through her work studying the muttonbird in Aotearoa New Zealand.
With a Master's and soon-to-be PhD under her wing, Sarah shared with Nesia Daily that her inspiration for studying seabirds initially began at her aunty's dinner table when she was served her favourite dish: muttonbird.
"I was kind of sitting in my undergraduate studies and we were being shown all this research about how they test our fisheries in New Zealand to make sure that our snapper and prawns, and all of these things are safe for us to eat," she said.
"And that kind of led me down a path of Indigenous food sovereignty harvesting practices, and who's actually looking out for the health of our communities from that kind of long-term scientific perspective?"
As Sarah soon found out, the answer was "no one".
Sarah's research focuses on three species of the muttonbird - the tītī (shaggy shearwater), the ōi (grey faced petrel), and the toanui (flesh-footed shearwater). ( Supplied )
Often there is tension between Western ideas of conservation and Indigenous practices, a gap the young Māori academic is trying to bridge with her research.
"They think that our practices are a threat to these communities, but from our side, it's our way of honouring our relationship with these birds.
"A conservation approach is - we look, we don't touch, we build fences around their habitats and try to keep rats away - and that's all we do.
"But when I spoke with a lot of my whanau and communities through my research, there was this pain of being separated from a relative, of having a connection to a part of ourselves cut off for generations, and a desire to see those harvesting practices brought back."
Sarah Rewi (right) and her fellow researchers. ( Supplied )
As part of her PhD with the University of Auckland, Sarah is examining how seabirds like the muttonbird are able to shed toxins and heavy metals from the ocean through their feathers.
However, with pollution and anthropogenic activities causing extremely high levels of mercury, lead, and zinc in the ocean, the concern is that "the next few generations of birds may not be as successful at removing very high concentrations of very toxic metals".
"Of course, the concern for our Indigenous communities is are we consuming those metals which are very poisonous?"
Beyond her PhD, Sarah's long-term goal is to open up a Māori-led research centre and have "the knowledge and resources return to our communities".
"To be able to have our own people that understand the context of our relationship with these birds in those spaces, I think will yield very unique solutions and research."
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The National party, led by Prime Minister Chris Luxon, agreed only to introduce the law - but not pass it - as part of a coalition agreement with the ACT party that allowed it to form government. After months of public consultation and nationwide backlash, National and NZ First, abandoned their support. with AAP and Reuters New Zealand's parliament has voted to enact record suspensions for three Māori MPs who performed a haka to protest a controversial bill. Hana-Rāwhiti Maipi-Clarke, 22, received a seven-day ban and her colleagues from Te Pāti Māori, the Māori Party, Debbie Ngarewa-Packer and Rawiri Waititi, are barred for 21 days. A parliamentary privileges committee in May recommended the suspension of the trio for acting in "a manner that could have the effect of intimidating a member of the house." Suspending MPs is rare in New Zealand's parliament with only three suspended in the past 10 years, according to parliamentary services. 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"It's not about the haka ... it is about following the rules of parliament that we are all obliged to follow and that we all pledged to follow," Collins said. The Labour party called for a compromise and proposed censure instead of suspension. The Treaty Principles Bill was a reform championed by the right-wing ACT Party to redefine the Treaty of Waitangi in law, stripping rights given to Māori at New Zealand's foundation. While the bill generated unprecedented protests across New Zealand, including tens of thousands marching on parliament, it did not become law. The National party, led by Prime Minister Chris Luxon, agreed only to introduce the law - but not pass it - as part of a coalition agreement with the ACT party that allowed it to form government. 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"It's not about the haka ... it is about following the rules of parliament that we are all obliged to follow and that we all pledged to follow," Collins said. The Labour party called for a compromise and proposed censure instead of suspension. The Treaty Principles Bill was a reform championed by the right-wing ACT Party to redefine the Treaty of Waitangi in law, stripping rights given to Māori at New Zealand's foundation. While the bill generated unprecedented protests across New Zealand, including tens of thousands marching on parliament, it did not become law. The National party, led by Prime Minister Chris Luxon, agreed only to introduce the law - but not pass it - as part of a coalition agreement with the ACT party that allowed it to form government. After months of public consultation and nationwide backlash, National and NZ First, abandoned their support. with AAP and Reuters

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