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  3. Wild Aro

Wild Aro

About us

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Wild Aro is a community based effort to help restore native birds in our valley and support through trapping of rats and other predators. Considerable success has been achieved in reducing the predator threat in our neighbouring Waimapihi reserve and increasingly in suburbs such as Brooklyn, Highbury and Kelburn through backyard trapping.

The trapping of rats in Aro Valley will help provide an additional area for rare native birds to expand into from current sanctuaries and also stop the reinvasion of neighbouring areas where they have been removed. Wild Aro is open to any level of participation. Whether it be putting your place forward to have a trap the backyard, helping others in your street with setting the traps, or supporting the running of the effort across the valley, all help will be welcomed.

Keen to get involved in your neighbourhood? You can also check out Ngā Kaimanaaki o Te Waimapihi!

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Anthony Hawkins

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© 2026 Predator Free Wellington • Privacy statement • Website by RS

  • Home
  • Our project
    • Our project
    • News
    • FAQs
    • Knowledge hub
    • Meet our team
    • Our impact
    • Our progress
    • Our supporters
    • Contact us
    • Impact dashboard
      • Native birds are closing the gap on introduced birds on Miramar Peninsula
      • Measuring economic impact
      • The social impact of Predator Free Wellington
      • Why Predator Free Wellington is built on community partnership
  • Sign up – Phase 2
    • Phase 2
    • Phase 2 volunteering
  • Miramar
  • Trapping
    • Find a trapping group
    • Community heroes
    • Knowledge hub
      • Our urban predator free blueprint (2024)
      • Most Significant Change (2025)
      • Return on investment (2025)
      • The value of volunteers (2024)
      • Habitat preferences of Ship rats (2023)
      • Social-ecological research (2022)
      • People, nature and wellbeing (2020)
      • Predator Free Miramar: How to kill rats and engage a community (2019)
      • Biosecurity: Rat or mouse?
      • Biosecurity: Rat or wētā droppings?
      • Biosecurity: Chew marks and chew cards
      • Biosecurity: Tracking tunnels and prints
      • How to get trapping (guide)
      • How to build a trapping tunnel
      • How to rat proof your compost
      • How to make a wētā hotel
      • How to build a corflute trapping tunnel
      • H2Zero trial – case study
      • Improving our biosecurity – case study
      • Using dog detectors early – case study
      • How to maintain your Victor rat trap
      • How to run a tunnel building workshop
      • Conceiving an unfenced urban ecosanctuary at Mātai Moana (2024) – external link
      • Estimating the impact of Predator Free Wellington on tree wētā (2025) – external link
      • Assessing the effects of predator control and habitat on lizards in an urban landscape (2025) – external link
      • Webinar - Analysis of Predator Free Wellington data from Miramar (2024)
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