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RESEARCH ARTICLE (Open Access)

Me ora te Ngāhere: visioning forest health through an Indigenous biocultural lens

Kiri R. Reihana https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5569-6138 A * , Phil O’B. Lyver B , Andrew Gormley B , Megan Younger C , Nicola Harcourt A , Morgan Cox D , Mahuru Wilcox A and John Innes A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Manaaki Whenua Landcare Research, Private Bag 3127, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand.

B Manaaki Whenua Landcare Research, PO Box 69040, Lincoln 7640, New Zealand.

C Ngā Waihua o Paerangi Trust, 1 Mountain Road, Ohakune, New Zealand.

D Kiwi for Kiwi Trust, B:hive – Smales Farm, 74 Taharoto Road, Takapuna, Auckland, New Zealand.

* Correspondence to: kiri@taiao-ora.solutions

Handling Editor: Mike Calver

Pacific Conservation Biology 30, PC22028 https://doi.org/10.1071/PC22028
Submitted: 20 July 2022  Accepted: 12 May 2023  Published: 3 July 2023

© 2024 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND)

Abstract

Explanatory note

The following text is described in the Ngāti Rangi mita (dialect), although concepts may be similar e.g. Mouri = Mauri, the spelling reflects the tribal vernacular.

Context

National biodiversity monitoring in Aotearoa, New Zealand is primarily conducted within Eurocentric conservation frameworks. At present, Māori (Indigenous Peoples of Aotearoa) have limited interaction and role within these programs.

Aims

We explored a biocultural monitoring tool based on mātauranga (Māori knowledge) to inform Ngāti Rangi (a central North Island Māori tribe) about the health of spatially separate, but ecologically similar, forests within the Ngāti Rangi tribal estate.

Methods

We did a series of noho taiao (community workshops) and one on one interviews to collect the values that expressed a Ngāti Rangi world view, to measure the health of the ngahere (forest). Gradients and indicators were developed to apply a measure of ngahere health. The metrics were trialled in three forests to create a group understanding. The interviews provided an observation of ngahere health and assessed intergenerational differences in how forest health is perceived.

Key results

Rongoā, Manu, Ngahere, Wai, and Tangata were themes prioritised by Ngāti Rangi. Biocultural indicators revealed moderate health across the three forest sites, whilst the more ecological-based indicators indicated moderate to strong levels of health. Age-related differences in how forest condition indicated evidence of an inter-generational shift. However, it was agreed that the forest health had declined over the past 30–40 years.

Conclusions

A full sensory evaluation of forest health facilitates a deep relational connection to place, which coupled with philosophies such as reciprocity and whakapapa, are vital features of a biocultural conservation approach.

Implications

Cultural–ecological constructs are key in relationships between Indigenous Peoples and their environments. Biocultural approaches can contribute to reversing the current biodiversity crisis, through partnering in placed-based solutions.

Keywords: biocultural, biodiversity, biodiversity conservation, biology, conservation, conservation biology, conservation tools, culture, ecological restoration, ecology, forest, health, invasive species, New Zealand.

Introduction

Ngā kupu tohutohu i waihotia iho,

Hei whakahoehoei i te motu nei e.

For these are the teachings that have been passed on

For me to practice and apply throughout the land. (Kuia, Moe Ruka arā ko Anaera Mareikura, The waiata Whakapukepuke Ai, 1948; Che Wilson, 2021)

Explanatory note:The following text is described in the Ngāti Rangi mita (dialect), although concepts may be similar e.g.: Mouri = Mauri,: the spelling reflects the tribal vernacular.

Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities’ (IPLC) tenure over landscapes globally comprises 22% of the Earth’s land surface area, and is understood to hold an abundance of the planet’s biodiversity (Sobrevila 2008; Ogar et al. 2020). Subsequently, the leadership of IPLC and inclusion of Indigenous and Local Knowledge (ILK) are becoming increasingly recognised as key elements of programs to monitor, conserve and restore biodiversity, in assessment initiatives from local to global scale (Ntiamoa-Baidu 2008; Gavin et al. 2015; Sheil et al. 2015; Muashekele 2018; Paul-Burke et al. 2018; IPBES 2019). ILK systems can provide valuable information relating to the health and condition of environments, but also the wellbeing of communities reliant upon those environments (Lyver et al. 2017, 2019; Aitken et al. 2021). However, despite the recognised importance of ILK, challenges remain around IPLC justice and self-determination (Nadasdy 2009; Jones 2013); empowerment of local institutions (Almudi and Berkes 2010; Hoole and Berkes 2010); intellectual ownership of knowledge (e.g. Free Prior and Informed Consent; (FAO 2016)); knowledge interpretation and decision making (Ellis 2005; Stevenson 2006); and the integration of culturally diverse knowledge systems (Tengö et al. 2014). Current conservation goals and future strategies to achieve sustainability globally are not being met from current conservation trajectories (Diaz et al. 2019). To achieve targets such as those within the Convention on Biological Diversity’s (2018) Aichi Target 18 by 2050, IPLC centric strategies, processes and ways of being are vital additions in protecting biodiversity (Forest Peoples Programme 2020). Further, IPLC worldviews that address the disconnect and disharmony between nature and human societies are predicted to play a key role (Forest Peoples Programme 2020).

Māori (Indigenous Peoples of Aotearoa, New Zealand) are strongly committed to reasserting rangatiratanga (self-determination), in the management of their natural resources. Notably, Māori maintain relationships with their ancestral lands, freshwaters and seas through whakapapa (genealogical hierarchy) (Marsden and Royal 2003; Lyver et al. 2017; Aitken et al. 2021, Belcher et al. 2021). These connections are framed by one’s ancestral lineages woven through the physical and non-physical world, comprising of the responsibilities, obligations and reciprocating relationships that have been passed down through the generations (Nepe 1991; Timoti et al. 2017; Bishop 2019). As part of reasserting rangatiratanga rights, Māori cultural and ecological health frameworks are increasingly being used to monitor environmental change in Aotearoa and inform policy and decision making (Harmsworth 2002; Tipa and Teirney 2006; Awatere et al. 2017; Lyver et al. 2019). A significant aspect of rangatiratanga for Ngāti Rangi is the right to manage and measure the health of the environment based on this premise. However, to manage the environment based on mātauranga (Māori knowledge) requires an understanding of its health and wellness. The environmental wellness is intrinsically connected to mouri (life principle or vital essence of being), mana (authority and prestige) and oranga (wellbeing) of the Ngāti Rangi people.

The use of mātauranga as the baseline for understanding the forest from a Te Ao Māori (Māori worldview and values) allows cultural constructs such as taonga tuku iho (treasures passed down through generations, intergenerational knowledge sharing) and kaitiakitanga (see list below for definition) to emerge, contemporary references to cultural constructs are presented in Aitken et al. (2021) and Belcher et al. (2021). Definitions of these core cultural constructs from a Ngāti Rangi point of view are as follows (Harmsworth 2002; Tipa and Teirney 2006; Awatere et al. 2017; Lyver et al. 2019):

  1. Karakia – the reciting of incantations which acknowledge the environment and its reciprocating benefits that exist between humans and, the animate and inanimate beings of this world. It evokes a sense of enlightenment for our transition into another world, a spiritual, mental and physical transition or state of mind.

  2. Rangatiratanga – applying the right of self-determination, being able to create from traditional ways of knowing and being, in order to govern themselves with their own understanding of the world.

  3. Whakapapa – the connection to environment (Papatuanuku, earth) through kinship relationships. This connection is recited in the order of its origins. The lineal connections from the gods (eldest beings) to the humans (youngest) and all living things on this Earth. This concept holds the Ngāti Rangi lineage connections to these forests, rivers and lands.

  4. Turangawaewae – understood in Ngāti Rangi as ‘a place of belonging’. It is the most empowering expression of ones right of and ‘connection to a place’. It is usually associated with one’s whakapapa family lineage and or family’s connection to a place through an event.

  5. Kaitiakitanga – a holistic epistemological view of a cultural and natural world relationship where Māori act in an obligational role of stewardship or guardianship within the environment. One of the key elements in enacting this caretaking role is the protection of the mouri within it.

  6. Mātauranga – most widely known as Māori knowledge, here its use is in terms of the traditional practices of the Ngāti Rangi people, which guides their understanding and decision making to enacting rangatiratanga and kaitiakitanga.

  7. Taonga tuku iho – treasures passed down to us from our ancestors, tried and true wisdoms from old and intergenerational traditional knowledge sharing.

Here we report on the Ngāti Rangi example of parameterised metrics of forest health embedded in their worldview and how this expression supports Ngāti Rangi assertion of rangatiratanga in their co-management aspirations.

Embedded in these core system principles is the enduring Ngāti Rangi ways of knowing, living and being such as cultural harvesting practices (e.g. only taking what is needed; utu or reciprocity, giving back to the environment more than you take; this was also seen in the comments about the understanding of manaakitanga). Other strong principles include the heritage legacy from their kaumātua (e.g. the values instilled by their grandparents, trees that are named after their ancestors to mark events and places). The heritage legacy embodies all their taonga tuku iho – intergenerational knowledge which is passed down.

Decades of legislative transformation have signalled and championed this change in New Zealand with the implementation by legislation and policy such as the Resource Management Act (1991) (NZ). However, environmental systems that better empower Iwi (tribes), hapū (sub-tribes), and whānau (families) in Aotearoa are needed (e.g. kaitiakitanga – Māori customary conservatorship; (Roberts et al. 1995; Aitken et al. 2021; Belcher et al. 2021).

The goal of this study was to develop a Te Ao Māori (Māori worldview and values) biocultural approach, based upon the way of knowing and being of a central North Island Māori tribe, Ngāti Rangi, that linked understandings of forest health to the community. Although there was an interest from Ngāti Rangi to conserve keystone cultural species, such as kiwi - flightless native nocturnal bird, Apteryx owenii, kereru - NZ Wood Pigeon, Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae, tītī - Sooty Shearwater or mutton bird, Puffinus huttoni etc., the community desired an approach that considered the broader forest environmental health and how community members interact with their local environment.

The Ngāti Rangi tribe had a registered population of 1450 in the 2018 New Zealand census (TKRC Trust 2019), in the Ruapehu region where the tribal area is located. The natural tribal forest estate of Ngāti Rangi is considered to be a pristine environment (Ruapehu District Council 2018; Brooker 2019).

Our objectives were to construct a Ngāti Rangi biocultural vision with key cultural values and themes identified by kaumātua (esteemed elders) and ngā tāngata tiaki (environmental guardians guided by their kaitiaki (traditionally a guardian or spiritual messenger from the natural environment eg, birds, mammals, animals, mystical creatures etc) to look after the land) that connect community to their local environment. Gavin et al. (2015, p. 141) defines biocultural approaches to conservation as ‘Conservation actions made in the service of sustaining the biophysical and sociocultural components of dynamic, interacting and interdependent social-ecological systems’. These principles incorporate and take into consideration the complexities of cultural and biological ethics, and practices in conservation, shifting the paradigm from ‘people centric’ to ‘nature centric’ goals and outcomes (Gavin et al. 2015; Lyver et al. 2019).

From a Ngāti Rangi biocultural vision, a cultural monitoring framework, that considered a whole forest system and its capacity to reflect significant values for Ngāti Rangi, was developed. Ngāti Rangi led the researchers in assigning culturally-significant themes and indicators and a gradient of ordinal scores was developed by the researchers, to assess current forest health, but also changes in forest health over a historical timeframe (70 years). To understand whether there had been intergenerational shifts in forest health, we asked kaumātua and ngā tāngata tiaki from the different age cohorts (>50-years and <50-years) to use ordinal indicators to score perceptions of historical and contemporary forest health states. This also enabled us to investigate how contemporary field evaluation of forest indicators compared with evaluations of forest indicators provided in interviews.

Materials and methods

Background

Ngāti Rangi are a tribal group of Māori located in the lower central North Island, with boundaries stretching from the southern base of Mount Ruapehu, through to the upper Whanganui river (Fig. 1). The people are part of the Whanganui iwi that descend from the ancestor, Paerangi, and identify to him through the pepeha (introduction that incorporates ancestry and history of individuals): Ko Ruapehu te maunga (Ruapehu is their mountain); Ko Ngā Turi o Murimotu te maunga tapu, (Ngā Turi o Murimotu is their sacred maunga); Ko Whangaehu te awa (Whangaehu is their river); Ko Ngāti Rangi te iwi (Ngāti Rangi is their tribe). (The tribe is located within and extends through the tribal boundary areas shown in Fig. 1).

Fig. 1.

Tribal territory of Ngāti Rangi and the three forest monitoring sites (Makatote, Pōkākā and Old Coach Road), North Island, Aotearoa-New Zealand.


PC22028_F1.gif

This research project was commissioned by Ngā Waihua o Paerangi Trust, under the Ngāti Rangi environmental operational division, Te Ao Tūroa (the tribe’s environmental entity) in 2017. The Ngāti Rangi community panel, Ngā Pou Taiao, is the community forum for reporting directly to the Ngāti Rangi tribal members, this comprised of pāhake (marae (Māori community gathering place, consisting of several buildings, centred around a main meeting house) based representatives or elders) and kaumātua who are knowledge holders in these specific areas.

Developing a Ngāti Rangi biocultural vision

A mixed methodology was used to record and disseminate the information and data collected for this research. Two noho taiao (marae-based workshops) were held with 54 Ngāti Rangi kaumātua and pāhake who had been identified by the Ngā Pou Taiao (Ngāti Rangi’s Environmental Resource Manager) as holders of mātauranga (Māori knowledge) associated with their local forests. Each noho taiao was attended by David Leigh, an illustrator tasked with capturing key cultural themes and indicators, species and narratives that were of significance to the community. These were then transformed into a poster format and are displayed within their offices for information and enjoyment for all the community. This information formed the basis of Ngāti Rangi Biocultural Vision, a summation of these posters is shown in Fig. 2.

Fig. 2.

Key cultural themes within Ngāti Rangi’s Biocultural Vision that formed the basis of their forest monitoring program in North Island, Aotearoa-New Zealand.


PC22028_F2.gif

Cultural monitoring framework

Using the information from the Biocultural Vision posters, two Ngāti Rangi ngā tāngata tiaki selected by the Ngā Pou Taiao then reviewed the posters and identified five key cultural themes based on their knowledge of the environment and the traditional uses associated with the environment (Awatere et al. 2017), to develop a cultural monitoring framework to assess the health and condition of their local forests. Key cultural themes within the framework included: rongoā (medicinal resources), manu (birds), ahua o te ngāhere (nature of the forest), wai (water), and tāngata (people) (Fig. 3).

Fig. 3.

Cultural framework used by Ngāti Rangi ngā tangata tiaki (environmental guardians) to structure their community-based monitoring system to assess forest health and condition. Arrows indicate the relationship between each construct and their intrinsic interconnection with each other.


PC22028_F3.gif

Using information provided by kaumātua and pāhake at the noho taiao, forest indicators were assigned to each of the five cultural themes within the community monitoring framework. How these indicators were observed and expressed by kaumātua and pāhake was utilised to inform the monitoring questions, and a gradient of ordinal rankings was applied to each (Table 1). The draft framework was then presented back to the Te Ao Tūroa, who worked collaboratively with their Ngā Pou Taiao forum. The forum gave feedback on the draft framework; this was revised, then formatted into a field sheet for testing.

Table 1.Key cultural themes, their associated indicators and ordinal scores and descriptions used to assess forest health by Ngāti Rangi kaumātua (elders) and ngā tangata tiaki (tribal experts) from the central plateau region of the North Island, New Zealand.

Cultural themesCultural indicatorsOrdinal scores MāoriOrdinal scores EnglishOrdinal score descriptions
Rongoā (medicinal plants)1 – Is this a known site for rōngoa?1 ĀnaYes
0 KaoreNo
2 – Are there weeds present?1 ĀnaYes
0 KaoreNo
Manu (birds)3 – Are taonga species present?1 ĀnaYes
0 KaoreNo
4 – Are insects present or can you see any evidence of them in this place? e.g. browsing, nests etc1 ĀnaYes
0 KaoreNo
5 – Is the voice of the Ngahere strong and full of life?4 NuiAbundantThe forest flourishing with diverse and taonga species (manu) that are abundant and thriving
3 PaiGoodThe forest is intact with minimal impact from pest species, taonga species are present
2 Ahua PaiOkThe forest has limited diversity with obvious impact from pest species, taonga species are present but not thriving nor abundant
1 ItiSmall or not significantThe forest has limited diversity with significant impact from pest species, taonga species are scarce
0 AueNot greatThe forest is severely limited with significant impact from pest species, no taonga species are present
Ngahere (Ahua o te ngahere: the nature of the forest)6 – Is the Ngahere floor flourishing?4 NuiAbundant(Look around, what can you see?) The ngahere floor is covered in dense leaf litter and debris, ferns, fungi and moss are abundant, the small shrubs and seedlings are diverse and abundant
3 PaiGoodThe ngahere floor is covered in dense leaf litter and debris, ferns, fungi and moss are present but less abundant, small shrubs and seedlings are not as dense nor diverse
2 Ahua PaiOkThe ngahere floor is covered with leaf litter and debris, fungi and moss are scarce, small shrubs and seedlings are spread out and scarce
1 ItiSmall or not significantThe ngahere floor is limited with leaf litter and debris, no sign of fungi or moss, any small shrubs and seedlings are dominated by two to four species
0 AueNot greatThe ngahere floor is severely limited with leaf litter and debris, no sign of ferns or juvenile trees. It is dry and feels impoverished.
7 – Are there canopy layers present and thriving?Can you see different bush tiers or tree layers e.g.: canopy, mid layers, totarāhoe? Are the tree’s foliage flourishing and thick, are there rakau supporting other plants?
4 NuiAbundantThe ngahere tiers are clearly visible, diverse species are presently thriving and abundant.
3 PaiGoodThe ngahere tiers are somewhat present and diverse.
2 Ahua PaiOkThe ngahere tiers are few and limited with limited diversity.
1 ItiSmall or not significantThe ngahere tiers are thin and letting light and wind through, little to no diversity
0 AueNot greatThe ngahere tiers is severely limited with large clearings
8 – Are there significant trees present? Why are they significant? – list1 ĀnaYes
0 KaoreNo
9 – Are any trees displaying symptoms of disease?1 ĀnaYes
0 KaoreNo
10 – Is there evidence of animal browsing?1 ĀnaYes
0 KaoreNo
11 – Do taonga species have a suitable habitat to thrive?4 NuiAbundantThe habitat capacity is very strong and diverse with very minimal impact from pest species, taonga species are presently thriving and abundant
3 PaiGoodThe habitat capacity is strong but less diverse with some impact from pest species, taonga species are present
2 Ahua PaiOkThe habitat capacity is limited with moderate to heavy impacts by pest species, very few taonga species are present
1 ItiSmall or not significantThe habitat capacity is limited with significant impact from pest species, taonga species number less than three species of manu
0 AueNot greatThe habitat capacity is severely limited with significant impacts from pests and exotic species, no taonga species are present
Wai (Water) (its presence within the forest to maintain the wellness of the forest)12 – How would you consider the mouri of the site?Using your observational senses how does the water (i.e. dampness) of the forest feel or smell, its presence or absence in the forest
3 Mouri oraHealthy life essenceThe mouri (life force) of the wai (water) is flourishing, the forest smells and feels damp and key taonga species are abundant
2 Mouri piki akeAscending life essenceThe mouri of wai is expanding, the forest smells damp and key taonga species are present.
1 Mouri ohoAwakening life essenceThe mouri of wai is improving, the forest has no damp smell and key taonga species are scarce.
0 Mouri ‘te rongoRevealing or uncovering life essenceThe mouri of wai is inactive, the forest feels and smells dry and key taonga species are absent
13 – What is the rongo of the wai in the ngahere?Using your observational senses how do you see/smell/feel the vibrancy of the mouri at this site?
3 Mouri oraHealthy life essenceThe mouri is flourishing and key taonga species are abundant (manu (birds)/rakau (trees) etc.)
2 Mouri piki akeAscending life essenceThe mouri is expanding and key taonga species are present
1 Mouri ohoAwakening life essenceThe mouri is improving and key taonga species are scarce
0 Mouri ‘te rongoRevealing or uncovering life essenceThe mouri is inactive and no key taonga species are present
Tangata (People) (their cultural interactions and non-cultural impact on the forest)14 – Can whanau participate effectively in manaakitanga?The ability for whānau to support the wellbeing of both themselves and wider whānau is enhanced or diminished through the active use of the site for harvesting (kai (food) e.g. hunting, rongoā or weaving/decorative) purposes and can be shared daily and/or at functions like hui and tangihanga (cultural funeral practices). Activities can also incorporate kaitiakitanga (act of stewardship) (trapping/restoration projects) and recreational use e.g. bush walks, hunting etc.
4 NuiAbundantAbundant kai/resource available, site is very actively and specifically used.
3 PaiGoodSufficient kai/resource available, site is broadly utilised.
2 Ahua PaiOkSome kai/resource available and the site is moderately utilised.
1 ItiSmall or not significantSparse kai/resource available and the site is hardly used.
0 AueNot greatKai/resource unavailable and the whānau don’t use the site.
15 – Can whanau participate effectively in whanaungatanga?Whānaungatanga in this instance is the ability to practise taonga tuku iho – intergenerational knowledge transfer, e.g. maramataka (lunar calendar), rāhui (harvesting or use restrictions), and wānanga (learning gatherings), etc.
4 NuiAbundantSpecific mātauranga is shared here often: e.g. Rongoā/weaving/karakia (Incantations)/wānanga etc. mātauranga and tikanga (customs, traditional practices) are shared with whānau at this site, it is regularly used for these practices this site.
3 PaiGoodSite known for mātauranga and tikanga sharing with whānau on occasion, whānau likely to come here to practise/share mātauranga here
2 Ahua PaiOkSome mātauranga and tikanga has been shared with whānau at this site, however infrequently but it is known to happen
1 ItiSmall or not significantLimited mātauranga and tikanga are shared with whānau at this site, it is uncommon to practise here
0 AueNot greatTikanga is not practiced or shared with whānau at this site

Table glossary: taonga – scared or treasured; rakau – tree, stick, timber or length of wood, rongo – scent, aroma or smell of water.

Ngā tāngata tiaki surveys of contemporary forest health

A select group of Ngāti Rangi ngā tāngata tiaki were identified based on criteria including: those who grew up using the forest for cultural purposes, or held cultural knowledge about practices that had been passed down to them, or who had worked within the forests. These ngā tāngata tiaki led the development, provided feedback and trialled the paper and digital framework application of the tool. Ages ranged between 18 and 49 years (n = 7 <50 years, three female (F), four male (M)), which became the age range groupings for our survey categories, which is under 50 years and over 50 years. The surveys were conducted from August 2019 to May 2021 with two individuals surveying every year and those who were trained and available making up the participant numbers. Not all survey sites are reported here, due to inconsistencies in the data over the 3-year period.

These ngā tāngata tiaki were selected by the Ngā Pou Taiao to test the survey on current forest health. Three forest sites were selected for the survey, based on accessibility, cultural importance and current tribal usage. The three sites were Makatote, Pōkākā and Old Coach Road. Surveying was undertaken at randomised locations within the three sites. At each location, ngā tāngata tiaki led the researchers along their known trapping, hunting and public tracks (which acted as a survey line) into the forest for a minimum of 20 min (maximum of 4 h). These were key spots of significance identified by the Ngā pou taiao, e.g.: rongoā spots, bird roosting/nesting locations, animal hunting spots etc. Once at the survey sites, ngā tāngata tiaki discussed the questions and articulated how they understood the metric measure, for the scoring process. Researchers asked ngā tāngata tiaki not to disclose ranking scores to each other to limit participant bias or influence on each other while scoring.

Makatote (175°23′34.01″E and 39°21′52.01″S) is predominantly podocarp–broadleaved native forest. It is around 2500 ha and currently includes part of the Pōkākā Eco-sanctuary now within the owned and managed rohe (tribal district) of Uenuku (a neighbouring tribe) as well as the Makatote Viaduct located between Ohakune and the national park. Previously managed by DOC (New Zealand Department of Conservation), after Treaty settlement claims it has returned to Iwi ownership and management.

Pōkākā (175°23′29.45″E and 39°17′30.95″S) is a mixed beech and podocarp native forest stand located to the south of the Makatote site and is included in the above mentioned Eco-sanctuary. The Pōkākā site is accessed over the old western line tramway, which was reopened to the public in 2006. The tramline moved products such as timber, cattle and sheep to processing plants and ports for export. Many industry artefacts, historical buildings and waahi tapu (sacred sites) occupy the site. It was closed as a station in 1965, with complete public exclusion from 1971.

Old Coach Road (175°22′45.33″E and 39°21′53.01″S) is a mixed podocarp and tawa (Beilschmiedia tawa) stand located further south of Mt Ruapehu than the two other sites. This includes a 100-year-old regenerating bush area that is co-managed by Ngāti Rangi through Ngā Waihua o Paerangi trust and DOC. This site is frequently accessed and utilised for various leisure activities (tramping, biking, hiking, walking etc.). It is set back from the main highway and accessed by a public bike trail that runs through it, with colonising mānuka (Leptospermum scoparium) foliage around the edges, and a 20+ year regenerating mixed conifer (Podocarpaceae) forest. There are dense populations of native mamaku (Sphaeropteris medullaris) and ponga (Alsophila dealbata) tree ferns providing this site with an open canopy, comprised of mature trees with thick dense undergrowth foliage.

Kaumātua interviews of long-term forest health

Oral interviews and community wānanga (workshops or dialogue processes held in 2018 to 2020) were used to build a historical narrative on forest health in the Ngāti Rangi tribal territory, and to visualise trends in forest condition over time. For the purposes of this study, Kaumātua and ngā tāngata tiaki were identified by the Ngā pou taiao as being the Elders (n = 3 < 50, 1 F, 2 M; n = 6 > 50, 3 F, 3 M) who lead initiatives, live and are active in the Ngāti Rangi forests. Kaumātua were interviewed using the community-based monitoring questionnaire (Table 1) to portray a decadal visualisation of the state and condition of the forests over 90 years (1930–2020). The age of kaumātua ranged from 57 to 81 years, which became the second age range category. For each survey question, kaumātua were asked to share their earliest memories of the indicator and score it using the gradient of scores provided, those kaumatua who were able were part of the field test monitoring, and those who weren’t were interviewed within their homes/or in a comfortable place. Each kaumatua was then asked to score each indicator on a decadal basis up until the present day.

Analysis

Ordinal scores for the cultural indicators were provided by seven Ngāti Rangi ngā tāngata tiaki across three years for each of the three sites. Scores were aggregated across year and grouped by site, with mean scores for 15 indicators also calculated. The historical interview responses for cultural indicators provided regional indications of the state of forest health changes over time, according to the kaumātua and ngā tāngata tiaki. Ordinal scores assigned by six Ngāti Rangi experts aged 50 years and above were grouped into decadal responses.

Results

The ability of Ngāti Rangi to articulate their aspirations and decision making for their environment is the expression of rangatiratanga − the ability to self-determine systems and approaches as shaped by their own cultural world view.

Cultural themes and indicators of forest health

Key cultural themes to measure forest health revealed by Ngāti Rangi included rongoā (medicinal), manu (birds), ahua o te ngāhere (nature of the forest), wai (water) and tāngata (people) (Figs 2 and 3). Although ecologically based in their broad categorisation, these themes used a range of indicators to determine forest health and the relational connections between Ngāti Rangi and their forests.

The understandings of these themes, as defined by the ngā tāngata tiaki and kaumatua, are shown in Supplementary material S8.

Examples of how some of the cultural themes were expressed and understood through our trials follows.

Whanaungatanga (Question (Q)14, 15) the notion of being part of a larger group, which imbues one with the sense of co-operation and reciprocity, of obligation and commitment to the other individuals in a kinship group. It is a relational or family-like connection between blood relatives and non-blood relatives. The Ngāti Rangi understanding in this context was the ability to practice ‘taonga tuku iho’ – sharing of knowledge through the generations from the sharing of tribal practices of living and being, such as the maramataka – lunar calendar, which is specific to place, rāhui – active no-touch restrictions on resources for recovery and protections purposes and wānanga – learning language and traditional tribal ways in established cultural spaces (e.g. marae, forests, mountains and rivers etc.).

Rongo (Q13) or the smell of the wai (water) in the forest was a key indicator of health, taken to give an indication of the vitality of the living force of the forest:

You saw me sniff, that is what it is about it is the smell. (Full quote in S1). (Whaea Olive Hawira, pers. comm., Nov 2019).

The most important thing in the bush is the moss and the lichen, ko rātou ngā tuākana (they are the seniors). You can smell in a dry year the pirau (rot) of the forest because the moss is crying, because there is no moisture in there. That is the indicator. (Che Wilson, pers. comm., Nov 2019)

Another cultural indicator identified in assessing forest health was the ‘voice of the forest’ (Q5). Is it strong and full of life?

It has different voices dependant on the time of the day, dawn chorus is loud and noisy, then late afternoon its the insects kihikihi (cicada, Cicadoidea) and everything, then they peter off and the birds start up again. (Kaumatua Keith, pers. comm. Nov 2019)

At the inception of the surveys, manaakitanga (Q14) was understood to be the ability to harvest and share within the whānau/hapū/hāpori (section of kinship group) acknowledging the different scale of gatherings (e.g. immediate family, wider family members and various community meetings such as tangi (funerals) and hui (community meetings). As the whānau become more connected with the ngāhere, a more reciprocal relationship with the forest (e.g. showing their ‘care towards the ngāhere’) was discussed. Through actions such as trapping and pest control, their sense of manaakitanga shifted from ‘me-centric’ to ‘forest-centric’ in the way participants framed their perspectives.

A traditional practice that was revived from the noho taiao, was the practice of walking in complete silence to an allocated site, (e.g. the forest lake), to enable deep connection and listen to the voice of the forest. The ngā tāngata tiaki would then karakia (recite an incantation) at the site and discuss the monitoring or what they had observed in the forest environment on the way.

Ngāti Rangi assessment of forest health

At the Makatote site, ngā tāngata tiaki felt that there was a moderate opportunity for the Ngāti Rangi community to participate in manaakitanga in Fig. 4 (indicator i 14) and whanaungatanga (i 15). This forest was ranked highest for these indicators. Makatote had more native insects (i 4), fewer weeds (i 2) and little evidence of animal browsing (i 10), greater forest floor regeneration (i 6), layering within the canopy (i 7), and stronger smell of water in the forest (i 13) than the other forest sites. It also scored highly for providing a suitable habitat for taonga to thrive (i 11) and having significant trees present (i 8). The site received a moderate to strong score for mouri (i 12). However, ngā tāngata tiaki felt Makatote site was not well known for its rongoā rākau (i 1).

Fig. 4.

Average proportions of ordinal scores for indicators assigned and used by ngā tangata tiaki (tribal experts) to assess the health and condition of three forest sites (Makatote, Pōkākā and Old Coach Road) in the Ngāti Rangi tribal territory, North Island, Aotearoa-New Zealand.


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At the Old Coach Road forest site, ngā tāngata tiaki considered the mouri to be fairly strong (i 12), with a moderate opportunity for the community to enact manaakitanga (i 14). However, the capacity of the community to deliver whanaungatanga from this site was considered only fair to moderate (i 15). The Old Coach Rd site was the most well known for rongoā rākau (i 1) albeit only moderately – despite the presence of weeds (i 2), evidence for disease in the trees (i 9) and browsing by introduced animals (i 10) being the highest for any of the three sites. Broadly speaking, ngā tāngata tiaki scored the presence of (1) taonga species (i 3), (2) suitable habitat for taonga species to thrive (i 3), (3) insects (i 4), (4) significant trees (i 8), and (5) canopy layers as moderate to high (i 7). The strength of the forest voice (i 5), growth across the forest floor (i 6), and smell of moisture in the forest (i 13) was also considered to be moderate to high.

At the Pōkākā site, ngā tāngata tiaki felt there was only a limited opportunity to participate in manaakitanga (i 14) and whanaungatanga (i 15), despite there being a moderate sense of mouri (12) in the forest. Pōkākā was not well known for its rongoā rākau (1), even though the forest scored moderate to high ratings for the presence of (1) taonga species (i 3), (2) suitable habitat for taonga species to thrive (i 11), (3) insects (i 4), (4) significant trees (i 8), and (5) canopy layers (i 7); having a strong voice (i 5) and smell of moisture (i 13); and a flourishing forest floor (i 6). The presence of weeds (i 2) and evidence of disease (i 9) and animal browse (i 10) was also considered low to moderate.

Overall, the ecological indicators of health of the forests (e.g. presence of taonga species (i 3), insects (i 4), overall forest strata – from the forest floor (i 6) right up to the top canopy layers (i 7), with an abundance of flora and fauna diversity (i 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 11), suggest that these three forests were in moderate condition.

Assessment of historical change in forests

Ngāti Rangi kaumātua felt that a number of biophysical and cultural indicators (e.g. voice of the forest (i 5), forest floor regeneration (i 6), smell of water (i 13), showed that health and condition of the forest began to decline from the 1970s (Fig. 5). Whilst there were large gaps in scores over the 1990s, 2000s and 2010s, kaumātua scored all biophysical and cultural indicators much lower in 2020 than for the same areas 30–90 years ago (Fig. 5). Younger ngā tāngata tiaki were much more positive in their combined assessment of these indicators across the three forest sites in surveys.

Fig. 5.

Decadal average ordinal scores assigned by Ngāti Rangi kaumātua (elders; dark blue bars – interviewees) to indicators of forest health from across the Ngāti Rangi tribal territory, central North Island, Aotearoa-New Zealand. Red bars (far right within each subplot) represent average scores provided by Ngāti Rangi ngā tangata tiaki (tribal experts) from field monitoring at the three forest sites Makatote, Pōkākā and Old Coach Road.


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Discussion

Kimihia te hōhonutanga o tō tātou Māoritanga i roto i to tātou Atuatanga

Kumea ake ki runga ki Te waka-o-te ora

Pursue the depths of our culture within our spirituality

Place what you find upon the vessel that gives you life. (Che Wilson 2021)

Across the three forest sites, ngā tāngata tiaki felt that the biocultural indicators indicated moderate health, whilst the more ecological-based indicators, indicated moderate to strong levels of health. Mouri as a cultural construct was assessed as being moderately strong at all sites, suggesting the vigour of life at the sites was in a healthy thriving condition. Manaakitanga and whanaungatanga, the other cultural measures of importance to Ngāti Rangi, also indicated that there were moderate to good opportunities for whānau to be engaged and enact their cultural practices on a regular basis. Although Old Coach Road was considered to have moderate opportunities for collecting rōngoa rākau, it also scored the highest for weed and disease presence, and animal browsing. Age-related differences in how forest condition was scored indicated evidence for an inter-generational shift in how the forest is perceived and understood, for example what is considered to be healthy, thriving or good forest health now, may be ‘poor forest health’ in the past or in kaumatua younger years. However, the impressions of the kaumātua and ngā tāngata tiaki indicated that the forest health had declined over the past 30–40 years.

Monitoring towards a biocultural vision

Within each of the cultural themes and metrics Ngāti Rangi used for measuring forest health, underpinning cultural concepts such as manaakitanga and whakawhanaungatanga are intrinsically expressed throughout. For Ngāti Rangi the whakapapa of sacred forests is the systematisation of ancestral links to every species within forests. Several of the indicators were chosen to identify various aspects of the cultural links in forests, for example; in asking the question: Are there significant trees present? How whakapapa is understood here is encapsulated in the community discussions on a sacred tree for the Ngāti Rangi whānau. The trees identified through this indicator hold various whakapapa on families who were associated as the stewards of the tree, bird, insects, vegetation and fruits, and the intricate connections of all these different aspects. Similar relationships have been observed in other Indigenous cultures (Maffi and Woodley 2012). For example, the Bamenda Highlands tribal communities in Africa highly regard the Bannerman’s Turaco bird (Tauraco bannermani), which holds the peoples’ genealogical connections to the endemic biodiversity and local cultural practices. Another example is the Gamo people from south-western Ethiopia (Maffi and Woodley 2012), whose sacred sites retain their genealogy with regards to worship, natural forests, burial grounds and other natural landscape features. Natural landscapes and the subsequent biodiversity hold the historical lineages of peoples, places and species that retain the community genealogy of place. The importance of place and connection to place is considerable for Ngāti Rangi in biocultural conservatorship, therefore there is a strong requirement for indicators that reflect those values.

Embodied in the Ngāti Rangi vision is connection to place, which provides place-based solutions. These encompass their cultural ways of being, knowing and doing, based on the geographical place from where they are derived. Cultural knowledge echoes the origins of place, as an integral part of being connected to place, capturing the local dialect, names of places and species, and landscape narratives which hold their historical accounts (Maffi and Woodley 2012). For Māoridom, karakia (prayer and incantation) must take place before all cultural activities. This is recited to connect the spiritual to the physical realm, and it is foremost in facilitating connection to place and space (Barlow and Wineti 1991; Moon 2005). Karakia is used as a mechanism of transition in this instance, from the contemporary physical world (which includes modern living, devices and ceaseless communication modes), into the natural world (commonly, out of internet range and off grid). Karakia is seen as a petition, plea or prayer to the atua (gods) to find favour in the activities that are about to be conducted, in this context. Tāne Mahuta is the god of the forests and all its associated beings (birds, insects, trees, shrubs, mosses, fungi and mammals) (Barlow and Wineti 1991; Moon 2005). It is used as a means to listen, and to maintain a deep connection to place and the environment you are moving into.

..... we would have karakia in the carpark, whakapiri (gather together). (full quote in S2). (Deb Te Raki, pers. comm., 2019)

Ngāti Rangi as a tribe hold many whare wānanga (traditional schools of learning) including the ‘Tira Hoe Waka’ (A sacred journey of connection) for the descendants of the Whanganui River. This tradition spans 34 years and connects those descendants who have not seen ancestral sites along the river, and stories of their families, to maintain a strong connection to place. These practices epitomise concepts that align with biocultural practices and preserves their relationships between humans and nature (Plieninger et al. 2015; Lyver et al. 2016, 2019; Sato et al. 2021).

The monitoring tool supported this transferral process through the noho marae and workshops that were held at each place to develop and test the framework. Another facet of the tool to collect and communicate oral histories was its transferral into a mobile application to record the images and the stories from Elders and active younger generations in the ngāhere. For the whānau of Ngāti Rangi, this facilitated not only reclamation of their knowledge systems and spaces, it was a means of gathering historical narratives as well as quantitative cultural data (Younger 2021).

.. because we have lost that skill, … …(Full quote in S3). (Anonymous, pers. comm., 2020)

Providing data on cultural aspects relevant to traditional practices is essential for not only regenerating mātauranga but also adapting it to current practices and the challenges. As an example, the naturalisation of introduced animals as the new sustenance economy (e.g. feral pigs, Sus scrofa; deer, Cervus spp.; feral goats, Capra hircus). Also, the revival of mātauranga associated with plants for consumption and medicinal use has increased with active engagement in the forest. Adapting mātauranga to mitigate the harm of introduced species and improve forest health provides the opportunity for ngā tāngata tiaki to engage back with their forests. A biocultural monitoring tool is one facet that Ngāti Rangi can use to reconnect, reclaim and build new knowledge around their forest. This mechanism explicitly supports the Ngāti Rangi vision to grow tribal knowledge of their people across landscapes.

Our indicators identify aspects of kaitiakitanga that can be observed and measured in action such as participating in manaakitanga and whanaungatanga. These activities require regular and ongoing interaction within the environment in a reciprocal approach in caring for the wellbeing of the natural landscape. The reciprocal relationship that mutually exists between humans and the environment is well documented (Marsden and Royal 2003; Sterling et al. 2017; Lyver et al. 2019; McKemey et al. 2019; Reihana et al. 2019; Thompson et al. 2020). Acting as ngā tāngata tiaki is to promote the welfare and health of the earth; manaakitanga is the sharing and harvesting of the bounty the earth provides and whanaungatanga is the passing on the traditions and knowledge around how to best action these practices. These are are empowering kaitiakitanga.

I think in terms of manaaki tangata and manaakitanga our ngāhere….(Full quote in S4). (Olive Hawira, 2020)

The indicator scores used in this study are just the beginning in an effort to develop the best picture of forest biodiversity and community health for Ngāti Rangi. These scores have started to form a baseline representation of the health of these three forests, based on these biocultural tools. They have anecdotally provided a cultural use and resource appropriation illustration for Ngāti Rangi. Here we can observe an understanding of how manaakitanga is informing current forest ecology practices and its use to inform future cultural practices and decision making. Overall these scores provide a first glance at the forest health from a cultural perspective, highlighting that the ecological health is in a relatively good state, whereas the cultural indexes were recorded at a magnitude level lower state.

A future aspect to be considered is how the various indicator scores ‘fit together’ to provide an overall view of forest health. Support for collaborative knowledge partnerships in Wardell-Johnson et al. (2019) exemplify the positive trends for future forest management. Each indicator provides insight into one attribute of forest health and is considered in isolation, then holistically. Weighting of attributes’ contributions within the collective context and individually is common across Eurocentric environmental monitoring: the NZ Department of Conservation monitor a range of taxa across the public conservation estate, and reporting requires an overall assessment of the ecosystem health (Bellingham et al. 2020). This process is often subjective, relying on individual value judgements, and is generally carried out by senior staff members. More recent approaches have begun to look at multi-attribute expert elicitation approaches (Sinclair et al. 2015), which have the potential to be used. In this tool we utilise two cultural themes that assess the forest health in its entirety, for example mouri and whanaungatanga, these aspects can comfortably contribute to the overall assessment in forest health at the coarse and microbial spatial scales.

In a similar vein, Indigenous Peoples must wrestle with weighting and values judgment in assessing the health of their environment and its future data usage, transference and transmission. Traditionally conveying the understanding back to the community was held by tohunga (specialist experts) and the kaumātua of the hapū (sub-tribe) or iwi (tribe). These were the management and decision-making processes of the local cultural institutes, te whare wānanga (Marsden and Royal 2003; Jones 2013). Reinstating and recognising such tohungatanga (practising specialists) would re-establish a crucial cultural construct within Māori culture.

Refining the biocultural monitoring framework

For Ngāti Rangi this framework and tool provided the opportunity to have community discussions on what a forest health assessment and monitoring tool, developed using a biocultural approach, looks like for Ngāti Rangi. What is yet to be considered is how to mitigate shifting baselines across the generations, and whether that matters.

From evidence in Fig. 5, a shifting baseline of observation over time by the two age groupings was detected. As defined by Pauly (1995) and Knowlton and Jackson (2008) the baseline understanding of a habitat, species, or biome and its current setting is its state of health at a point in time. As demonstrated in Fig. 4, we see ngā tāngata tiaki who surveyed the forest were more optimistic of the condition of the forest than those who observed decline in the interviews of the kaumātua or older generations (Pauly 1995; Lyver et al. 2021), which were held away from the forest setting. This shifting baseline could reflect how each generation’s observation of decline is grounded in their current time world experience. It may also reflect the abundance the older generation observed in the early 1950–1960s and earlier, which the younger generations never experienced. The older generation may thus see the decline in a more vivid comparison to their current known reality. Although the overall indicator averages obtained from participants on site were much higher than those from people who were interviewed elsewhere, we surmised that people’s memory of the forest recalled in the interviews may also be recalling the forest in a worse or best-case scenario.

Although the young and old people in their families do have many opportunities to share knowledge in different forums such as the tira hoe, local marae noho are a consistent presence in their annual whānau calendars. Further development and understanding that has come from this tool and its evolution will be required. As with mātauranga, this tool is a living mechanism with which to facilitate the requirements of the iwi. This notion will allow future generations to incorporate knowledge flexibly.

Although it is critical to reclaim these cultural tenets and connections to the forest and live in unison with nature as per the practices of our ancestors, the reality and comfort of contemporary living is much more alluring. Iwi and hapū nationally are struggling to appeal to the next generations to elevate the value of these important relational connections to the environment. Connecting youth through media is one way that has emerged as a solution for the younger generations. Pairing technology with actual environment-based educational programs may offer a bridge in this gap (Reihana et al. 2019, 2021). Remote observation through a network of cameras and satellites may also be a temporary solution, and may at least provide a continuity of presence within these environments. This may facilitate contemporary solutions to current environmental issues and pressures in real time. Contemporary solutions now must be attempted to achieve these aspirations to reinvigorate the relational connections that as humans, we are all striving to maintain, in order to address the biodiversity crisis.

The robustness and significance of the data and information collected would benefit from larger sample size, such as more ngā tāngata tiaki or local whānau collecting information to get rigour from the information. With increased ngā tāngata tiaki, the overall health scoring system would benefit from diversifying monitoring locations to gain a wider extent of the forest footprint and strengthen its accuracy.

We need to consider other values that have been excluded, that could support forest health such as utu or reciprocity (Marsden and Royal 2003; Petrie 2013; Lyver et al. 2017; Reihana et al. 2021), between the forest and user. This concept was referred to under the indicator of manaakitanga and the shifting understanding of this concept evolved from whanau when they became aware of the forest reciprocity, not just in what it could provide for humans who use it but how they provided manaakitanga or care back to the forest through activities such as pest control and weed management.

So, the expression of our land, and our ngāhere, and our rivers loving us with all of their energy (Full quote S6). (Keith Wood, pers. comm., 2020)

Mechanisms to achieve rangatiratanga (self-determination) and kaitiakitanga (stewardship)

Ngāti Rangi propose to use the information on the state and health of forests to inform local decision making and action. The community recognises the need for trend data that reflects a worldview and that Ngāti Rangi people can relate to, and trust. The biocultural framework will also provide a cultural perspective on current conservation practices and actions. In Australia, local policy was developed with Wik Way and Kugu people’s traditional knowledge to inform tribal areas’ pest control and management programs using traditional techniques in feral animal and pest management (Maffi and Woodley 2012). Although there is a strong desire for Māori to take the appropriate lead partner role with the Crown in co-governance and co-management of their natural resources, evidence suggests that this is a distant reality for Māori (Rainforth 2021). Māori refer to the foundational document the Treaty of Waitangi for restitution, however this process is yet to be realised. Financial equity for research on behalf of iwi stymies the ability for iwi to participate at full potential. Inequity between cultural ways of being exists across conservation socially, ecologically and spiritually.

Cultural constructs embedded into legislations such as kaitiakitanga in the Resource Management Act (1991) is another characteristic used to empower Māori in the conservation space. Although a number of constructs have been in legislation for many years e.g. section 4 of the Conservation Act (No. 65) (1987)(NZ), the interpretation of what this means in practice and the enactment on the ground is still to be elevated into an equitable position. It is still the Crown that is determining what it means ‘to give effect to the Treaty of Waitangi’ …which is currently considered inadequate by iwi.

For Māori, kaitiakitanga is informed by traditional forms of community knowledge and expertise, which were held by tohunga or Elders who were trained and educated in the customary approaches and procedures, which guided community use and sustenance of natural resources. These specialists were the ultimate authority on natural resource use in the communities. However colonial intercession and repression has been persistent over time. From early settlement, acts such as the Native Land Act (1862) and the Tohunga Suppression Act (1907) applied colonial authority over cultural practices to assimilate Māori into mainstream European culture and repress their traditional cultural practices. The contemporary legislation and conservation policies, such as the Conservation Act No. 65 (1987), Wildlife Act (1953), the Reserves Act No. 66 (1977), National Park Act (No. 66) (1980), and the currently under-reform Resource Management Act (1991), still maintain barriers for iwi to participate fully in the co-management of their natural resources (Spicer 2019; Rainforth 2021). Current reforms are attempting to address these concerns, however for Māori the status quo remains. To shift legislation and authority dominance from the colonial structure to a more sustainable Indigenous cultural socio-ecological approach will require the presence of biocultural monitoring tools, and cultural data to inform management practices for the future.

To date, current resourcing to enable initiatives such as this to be developed has had slow traction from governmental agencies. Whereas iwi have struggled to self-fund, these initiatives are in competition with government agencies who are fully funded to undertake research. The proposed Te Mana O Te Taiao (Department of Conservation 2022) provides an opportunity that is signalling a change to more equitable opportunities for iwi in mitigating the biodiversity crisis in New Zealand. However, if ngā tāngata tiaki are not adequately funded and current conservation management structures remain in place, then the neoclassical conservation systems and structures will remain as barriers for Māori attempting to reassert rangatiratanga and kaitiakitanga.

Cultural data can now be collected, translated and transferred into metrics that provide measures for intangible cultural concepts, and track the health and wellness of the environment over time (Tipa and Teirney 2006; Awatere et al. 2017). Iwi have meaningful data to contribute to environmental decision-making processes, as well as building the capacity to develop, collect and manage data. Intellectual property (IP) and data sovereignty for whānau, hapū and iwi is protected through this process (Māori data sovereignty principles: https://www.temanararaunga.maori.nz/tutohinga) Providing autonomy and empowering Indigenous People in knowledge and information to benefit their communities is key in developing metrics that reflect ways of being (Tipa and Teirney 2006; Awatere et al. 2017).

Implementing cultural monitoring systems

In Aotearoa, Te Mana O Te Taiao (Department of Conservation 2022) has an implementation plan that prioritises addressing the drivers of biodiversity loss. This strategy identifies the need for integrated approaches that incorporate Te Ao Māori knowledge and systems. Further, emphasis is on tools that can collect information to inform biodiversity protection, considering their environmental, social, cultural and economic impacts. The tool developed here is a step towards achieving these national goals (Department of Conservation 2022).

A key cultural mechanism in this study, which Ngāti Rangi utilises in species management, is manaakitanga (Table 1), here it is the ability to use a population (for example) kererū to display their hospitality to visitors within their region, this was a sense of immense pride, as documented from the late 1880s up to the 1960s. However, due to a near extirpation of these populations, collection of this delicacy is now under a ban, and it is illegal for any Māori to harvest this resource. In this study we measure the ability for tribal members to be able to utilise resources in order to enact their cultural practice of manaakitanga, as seen in the results, across sites (Fig. 4) and over time (Fig. 5); the ability to perform this traditional practice over time has declined dramatically. Furthermore, understanding the implications of the state of the species from a cultural perspective and the availability of resources, we can link the impact it has had culturally on the Ngāti Rangi people. Biocultural approaches are aligned to these practices and are an opportunity to reverse not just ecological declines but socio-cultural impacts from colonial legacies.

National objectives such as Te Mana o Te Taiao explicitly references the desire to return the health of the natural world through mechanisms such as cultural monitoring tools. For example, it aims ‘to increase the integration of Te Ao Māori (the Māori world view) and elevate mātauranga Māori (Māori knowledge) in biodiversity decision making, management and funding’ (p. 5). Its central premise is to include people as a part of the cycle for restoration and conservation efforts instead of the historical view of humans as lords over the natural world (Department of Conservation 2022). This also aligns with the Tīwaiwaka Te Ao Māori conservation movement ‘Principle 2: Humans are not the centre of the universe’ (McGowan 2020). An Indigenous Peoples’ view of the world is now premising conservation; how this can be enacted is being investigated in multiple dimensions in Aotearoa and global conservation landscapes.

In accepting cultural monitoring mechanisms we need to consider the traditional land, resources and practices that are maintained in the contemporary context. One such method is rāhui (Memon et al. 2003; McCormack 2011; Fabre et al. 2021), where a temporary restriction is placed on utilising a resource to allow for recovery or purging of contaminants that it may have encountered (e.g. decline of resource; pollution or contamination of a species or site; death of an individual in a resource collection site). These existed historically and are now expressed in a contemporary manner.

Cultural monitoring systems such as these are contributing to land management practices globally. The Banbai rangers in Wattleridge Indigenous Protected Area (IPA) in Australia found that their traditional burn off practices provided higher habitat protection and better food forager opportunities, for the culturally-significant echidna, whereas the government led practices had more negative impacts on the habitat and changed the habitat resources (McKemey et al. 2019). In the Arctic, Inuit communities contribute to the Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks in developing an inventory to develop a set of practical recommendations for conservation management. The value of the cyclic dynamics of the hunters who were recording their observations of the environment, has led to the improved understanding of the population dynamics over time (Johnson et al. 2016).

Kaitiakitanga or Indigenous guardianship systems for biodiversity and the environment, which are Indigenous people’s worldviews, approaches and practices (Rozzi et al. 2006; Libby 2018; Hill et al. 2019), are aligned with ‘biocultural approaches’ (Maffi and Woodley 2012). Designing cultural monitoring frameworks and applying indicators that provide gradient measures that are trusted and make sense to local communities like Ngāti Rangi, provides the ability to enact cultural practices such as Rangatiratanga. Measurements of cultural, social and ecological constructs provide socio-ecological data that informs the decision-making process. Again, the Banbai Rangers used their cultural metrics to achieve a range of outcomes including conservation, cultural revitalisation, knowledge sharing and capacity development for the land management burn off practices (McKemey et al. 2019), putting their stewardship ethics into practice.

One of the things I’ve always been an advocate for is finding those cultural measurements and aligning them to the science stuff (Full quote in S7). (Keith Wood, pers. comm., 2020)

On a global scale the implications of this research support the enactment of Article 8 (j) of the Convention on Biological Diversity (1992), where traditional knowledge, innovations and practices are integral in combating the decline in biodiversity globally. The subsequent report – Local Biodiversity Outlooks 2 (Forest Peoples Programme 2020), highlights the critical roles IPLCs play in maintaining and enhancing ecological and cultural diversity in transformative change, and to realise the vision of the world living in harmony with nature. This study’s findings support this international convention in combating biodiversity decline from a Ngāti Rangi perspective in their tribal territory.

Roles of manaakitanga and whanaungatanga

Overall the cultural indicators of mouri, manaakitanga and whanaungatanga ranked much lower than the ecological-based indicators in the cultural themes Ngāhere, Manu and Rongoā Rākau in measuring the forest health in the Ngāti Rangi tribal territory. However, they remained above average in their overall scoring from ngā tāngata tiaki. Although the cultural measures did not score equally with those ecological, this may allude to the Ngāti Rangi displacement from their tribal lands and the dilution of cultural practices that have occurred over time from colonisation.

Although the ability to enact manaakitanga and whānaungatanga were fair at the Pōkākā site, its forest edges consisted of weed foliage such as thistles (Cirsium vulgare), blackberry (Rubus fruticosus) and dense bracken fern (Pteridium aquilinum). This site was also a known place for hunting introduced species of deer and pigs, these species replacing the traditional avian based sources and becoming the new mahinga kai (places for food gathering) for Ngāti Rangi. These introduced species are a modern conduit for fostering connection to place, through enabling manaakitanga (Kai-hau-kai – the sharing of wild food within communities) and whānaungatanga (togetherness and intergenerational knowledge sharing); the innate characteristic of men to hunt, gather and provide for family and community is being expressed in this context. What is now contended from naturalisation of these introduced species such as deer, goats and tahr etc. is the balance between their numbers for hunting and the destruction they cause if they are unmanaged in our wilderness. The key here is ‘management’ of these species in allocated areas as a preferred method, rather than unmanaged in sensitive and sacred areas.

Although the Old Coach Road site was regularly used for rongoā rākau collection, it was more readily accessible than the other two sites for general public use. The Makatote site, although right next to the main highway, had access issues and use was more restricted here. This study demonstrates how Ngāti Rangi use cultural values and lens to enact cultural concepts such as manaakitanga in conservation.

Through the active use of their forest sites, whānaungatanga is another concept which is stimulated once whānau are together in their natural landscapes. A strong sense of whanaungatanga is maintained within the tribe, this tool is another mechanism which supports this through noho taiao, and its continued use of the tool in maintaining their connection to their ngāhere.

High scores of forest health indicate a flourishing forest up to the period of the late 1980s to early 1990s (Fig. 5) with substantial opportunities to support a traditional sustenance economy. The long-term landscape history held in the Ngāti Rangi elders’ memories records the land use legacies that are critical in contributing to contemporary ecological management of their forests (Plieninger et al. 2015). The sustenance economy that sustained tribal members and surrounding communities with relative ease up to this period, has been impacted by urban migration of tribal members into cities for employment. This migration began in the late 1950s with an exponential increase from the 1980s, which continues to this day. Interview responses did highlight the change in how the forest is used today in comparison to in the early 1920–1940s periods where their livelihoods were totally dependent on the environment in providing for their families. Ngāti Rangi observations of the changes over time were also associated with particular species that declined or became extinct over those periods, thus affecting the ability to enact cultural practices. An example is the ability to provide manaakitanga (through local delicacies e.g. kererū) to large community events, even just for their families, due to the decline in the species.

Although cultural indicators such as manaakitanga, whanaungatanga, mouri etc. are usually considered indicators that are intangible and unmeasurable, we illuminated these socio-cultural aspects in order to link how the ecological impact has affected the cultural narratives and indicators over time (Plieninger et al. 2015; Sterling et al. 2017). Furthermore, barriers resulting from private ownership of lands and governmental management blocked access to Ngāti Rangi traditional lands and waters, resources, and sacred sites (Spicer 2019; Rainforth 2021). This meant that feelings of exclusion may have impacted how a site or species was assessed by ngā tāngata tiaki especially as those sites and species related to manaakitanga and whanaungatanga. Exactly what kind of impact this had was not captured as part of this study but would be worthy of future research.

Implicit to monitoring is the sustained process of assessing changes or threats in a habitat, ecosystem, biome or significant place over time (Sheil et al. 2015); an integral characteristic of monitoring is the presence of people within these ecosystems. For the Ngāti Rangi people the most successful way for them to monitor these forests is to maintain and increase the current occupation and participatory use that was practiced by ancestors. The cultural concepts used in this tool also elevate the Ngāti Rangi lens of the world and reflect cultural values, iwi vision and desires for a thriving iwi future (https://ngatirangi.com/nga-mahi/strategy-or-te-ara-ki-te-moungaroa). Creating such a tool supports a rigorous and objective assessment that fuses the traditional neoclassical monitoring model with an iwi world view.

With the tribe largely displaced from urban drift and re-location for employment, the traditional occupation and utilisation of their forests has declined. However, the sustained occupation of tribal lands by key Elders has maintained ahikaa (those who keep the fires burning in their ancestral lands) to continue their sharing of mātauranga, cultural practices and kaitiakitanga over natural resources.

Realising a biocultural vision

Kaitiakitanga – decision making informed by cultural indicators

The cultural indicators chosen here inform the biocultural vision for monitoring the Ngāti Rangi peoples’ forests, these principles are cultivated from their natural ecospheres, the complex interactions within their culture, in and of their place.

Utilising rangatiratanga, tribal members have the right to make decisions on the health of their forest, natural environments (mangai (representative of), wai and whenua (land, earth)) and communities. To illustrate rangatiratanga by being autonomous as an entity, and people of place, this tool provides information to facilitate such decision making in understanding the condition and how best to manage the tribal estate assets for the future.

In making those decisions they must understand the interrelated connections between all those living entities through their whakapapa, and the whakapapa of the forest. The significance of connections, to each other and within the natural world, which evokes active kaitiakitanga and the enduring aroha or love of the natural world.

The whakapapa connection has an expectation of reciprocation of which the provision of the resources is to be nurtured and sustainably used, in order to provide for future generations. This act of stewardship, as a right, is congruent with turangawaewae the connection to place, this place, that this tribe has, as people, which has been bequeathed by their ancestors. These understandings exemplify what a biocultural approach can look like in place.

Conclusion

This research support the conclusions of other studies (e.g.: (Maffi and Woodley 2012; Paul-Burke et al. 2018; Roue and Nakashima 2018; Winter et al. 2018; Lyver et al. 2019; Reyes-García and Benyei 2019; Ogar et al. 2020) that have pointed out that Indigenous Peoples’ and their knowledge systems have a key role to play in reversing the decline in biodiversity globally, especially as communities demand innovative place-based solutions. Here we have provided evidence of an Indigenous framework that captures the state of the biodiversity and environment from the Ngāti Rangi whanau, this is both informative and trusted information by their communities. This has empowered the community, and supports their Ngāti Rangi tribal connection to place and cultural heritage, as exhibited by the nga tangata tiaki feedback on listening and taking time to connect with their forests. Moreover, these kinds of approaches provide cultural context for which local assessment and management of the environment can thrive. Ngāti Rangi and Indigenous Peoples globally are striving for equity to use their knowledge to inform management decision-making.

Biocultural monitoring systems, such as this one developed by Ngāti Rangi, have incorporated their cultural concepts to assist their people’s connection to their tribal lands and provide an alternate Indigenous perspective of environmental condition. Here the definitions and meanings that have been portrayed are now described for future generations, this is taonga tuku iho (knowledge transferral) in action. It displays the depth to which Te Ao Māori consciously embed cultural concepts in their way of seeing, being and doing.

By its nature, we acknowledge that our biocultural monitoring tool is a living process, which will evolve as the local practitioners refine and adapt it for their specific purpose and future use.

Supplementary material

Supplementary material is available online.

Data availability

Data sharing is not applicable as no new data was generated or analysed during this study.

Conflicts of interest

The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Declaration of funding

The authors Kiri Reihana, Megan Younger, John Innes, Nicola Harcourt, Mahuru Wilcox and Hannah Rainforth were supported by the New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment contract Kiwi rescue project 1617-23-019M. Phil Lyver and Andrew Gormley were funded by New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment Endeavour Fund, Te Weu o te Kaitiaki – Indigenous Regeneration Pathways (C09X2104) and Strategic Science Investment Funding for Crown Research Institutes.

Disclaimer

All images used in this publication were commissioned specifically for this publication. The location map describes the region and location of the Iwi involved.

Acknowledgements

We thank the all the participants involved with the project especially all the whanau who participated in the Noho taiao marae workshops, interviews and advisory contributions of the framework and monitoring mobile application. From Ngāti Rangi whanau we would especially like to thank Keith Wood, Fred Hawira, Olive Hawira, and Amoa Hawira for trialling and providing feedback on the framework. Additionally we would like to thank Deb Te Raki, Rangipai Wilson, Papa Willie and Nana Vera Wilson, Korti Wilson and Che Wilson. Finally we extend thanks to Deana Wilson, Pou Whirinaki and the Ngā Waihua o Paerangi Trust, for submission review of the manuscript. Our gratitude goes out to Arthouse designers Isaac Reihana and Colin Keegan who developed the mobile application NGAHEREora and the reviewed iterations to get it to the functioning point it is at today.

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