@prefix dcat: <http://www.w3.org/ns/dcat#> .
@prefix dct: <http://purl.org/dc/terms/> .
@prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> .
@prefix xsd: <http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#> .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5> a dcat:Dataset ;
    dct:description """#Tranche 2: Strategic Objective 2##\r
\r
###We’re striving to empower New Zealanders to demand and enact environmental stewardship and kaitiakitanga (guardianship).###\r
\r
Empowering New Zealanders to demand and enact environmental stewardship and kaitiakitanga requires understanding the underlying values and drivers that lead some people to actively protect our biological heritage. It also requires understanding feedbacks between people in the landscape – some of whom actively intervene on behalf of the environment – and the ecosystems in which they live. Our programme employs two frameworks to obtain this understanding: one based on psychology, economics, and the ethics of human behaviour and one based on understanding complex social-ecological systems.\r
\r
**Co-Leads**\r
\r
- Dr Pike Stahlmann-Brown (Manaaki Whenua)\r
\r
- Dr Jane Kitson (Kitson Consulting)""" ;
    dct:identifier "97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5" ;
    dct:issued "2023-09-27T23:06:37.821038"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-08-22T22:13:35.239603"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:publisher <https://data.bioheritage.nz/organization/c222f9d0-5df7-4788-8cf6-e18fd5bd0116> ;
    dct:title "Empowering Kaitiakitanga and Environmental Stewardship" ;
    dcat:distribution <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/0828421c-229e-4901-bef9-a1cee5760da2>,
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        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/19778208-4c65-4ed4-912b-15482a3860b3>,
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        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/24bd6354-1156-4032-8e1b-d107dc4193c7>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/2c42ba09-0a7a-41cf-9a91-c086e96303b8>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/35418480-2968-4448-b8e7-6584743f96a5>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/52bcff65-ffbb-4869-94b0-83d55e4ccdb2>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/60418ebe-8fd2-40aa-93ec-dae40d134a6e>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/642accf7-9bfc-4524-ba8a-16bf7f9f6591>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/65311fac-e600-456a-932c-4ed123e1a6bd>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/7d12a56a-a3dd-42cb-918d-68fe698d023d>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/7ed30d3a-700c-4737-84f3-49dbc64f5bb9>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/93703497-09af-4aff-99bd-9e81f19f2c6d>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/9654ed55-704e-41a6-9efa-6f06093ae5ab>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/97f51330-ac6a-4ca3-a892-2ec894e80f53>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/9d49f56d-8231-4f52-ad6a-f81fa522bef5>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/a773a70e-bf55-4b58-8f56-5f0ee702e12d>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/a8dda6f1-3db4-4717-801e-5eea2a320d56>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/e58849cc-a52b-421d-842f-b9b8610192d8>,
        <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/fd55c912-f370-417d-bdd7-4d91cd5c4c8d> .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/0828421c-229e-4901-bef9-a1cee5760da2> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """#Restoring Urban Freshwater Diversity Survey data#\r
\r
Two surveys were conducted with the joint aim of demonstrating the benefits of applying a systematic behaviour change framework and providing foundational knowledge to inform behaviour change work to protect and restore urban freshwater biodiversity. This data is analysed in three associated papers...  \r
\r
*Survey one:*  \r
  \r
+ Understanding & Prioritising Key Behaviours to Enhance Urban Freshwater Biodiversity [(Paper 1)](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.120019)  \r
    \r
*Survey two:*  \r
  \r
+ Citizens’ Reporting of Pollution in Stormwater Drains and Waterways [(Paper 1)](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.120019)\r
+ Motivating Urban Residents to Volunteer for Waterway Restoration (Paper 2 inPrep)\r
+ Installation of above-Ground Rainwater Tanks in Urban Households (Paper 3 InPrep)  \r
\r
**Link to data:	https://doi.org/10.34721/so2-fwsurv**""" ;
    dct:issued "2024-03-18T21:39:25.652091"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-03-18T21:39:25.652091"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "DATA: Urban Freshwater Diversity Survey" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://doi.org/10.34721/so2-fwsurv> .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/095fce70-0c91-4dcc-9090-876ae7e4bb27> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Protecting and restoring freshwater biodiversity across urban areas in Aotearoa New Zealand: Citizens’ reporting of pollution in stormwater drains and waterways:###\r
\r
**February 2024**\r
\r
**McLeod LJ, Hine DW, Milfont TL, Dorner Z, Tassell-Matamua NA, Maris RDC, Kitson JC, Stahlmann-Brown P 2024. [Protecting and restoring freshwater biodiversity across urban areas in Aotearoa New Zealand: Citizens' reporting of pollution in stormwater drains and waterways.](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301479724000057/pdfft?md5=3a0ee036610767d6ec079362926794d2&pid=1-s2.0-S0301479724000057-main.pdf) J Environ Manage 351: 120019.**\r
\r
**ABSTRACT**\r
\r
Urbanization poses numerous challenges to freshwater biodiversity. This paper describes two studies with the joint aim of demonstrating the benefits of applying a systematic behaviour change framework and providing the foundational knowledge to inform future behavior change work to protect and restore urban freshwater biodiversity. In Study 1 we used a mixed-methods research design, involving 14 key informant interviews followed by an online survey targeting 17 freshwater biodiversity experts and another targeting a representative sample of 550 urban residents, to identify and prioritize the most promising resident behaviors to target to reduce stormwater pollution and improve natural waterway habitats in urban areas. Study 2 focused on the top-ranked short-term behavior identified in Study 1, citizen reporting of pollution in stormwater drains and waterways. We surveyed a representative sample of 1901 urban residents across Aoteraoa New Zealand to identify four main determinants influencing this behavior: awareness and uncertainty about reporting, lack of opportunity to report, social motivation and personal motivation to report, and five potential target audiences: ‘Supportive’, ‘Unaware but receptive’, ‘Motivated but lack support’, ‘Reluctant’, and ‘Not my problem’. We make recommendations for the most appropriate intervention designs to target each of these audience segments to promote the reporting of stormwater pollution in urban areas. This knowledge will allow for a more coordinated and effective approach for addressing the ‘human element’ that lies at the heart of many urban freshwater management problems.\r
\r
**KEYWORDS**\r
\r
Behaviour prioritisation matrix; Community-based social marketing; Behaviour change wheel; Audience segmentation; Behavior change; Intervention design""" ;
    dct:format "url" ;
    dct:issued "2024-01-08T01:08:32.003182"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-01-08T01:08:32.003182"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "PAPER: Protecting and restoring freshwater" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.120019> .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/0fe9bcbd-0b34-4d38-9deb-e6299838f5d6> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Motivating Urban Residents to Volunteer for Waterway Restoration###\r
\r
**March 2024**\r
\r
Volunteers from local communities can play an important role in restoring freshwater systems in cities. \r
\r
But how can local organisations attract and retain volunteers?This research shows that a better understanding of audiences helps develop campaigns targeting specific audiences to encourage volunteers.\r
\r
""" ;
    dct:format "PDF" ;
    dct:issued "2024-03-27T00:43:11.288985"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-03-27T00:43:11.288985"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "BRIEF: Motivating volunteers " ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/0fe9bcbd-0b34-4d38-9deb-e6299838f5d6/download/so2-env-stewardship-volunteering-4.pdf> ;
    dcat:byteSize 3846509.0 ;
    dcat:mediaType "application/pdf" .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/19778208-4c65-4ed4-912b-15482a3860b3> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###What Do We Need to Do to Protect and Restore Urban Freshwater Systems?###\r
\r
**March 2024**\r
\r
What are the behaviours that create the most significant impact when it comes to reducing stormwater pollution and helping improve waterway habitats in cities and urban areas? \r
\r
The results of this study will assist government agencies, environmental organisations, and community groups.  \r
  \r
https://doi.org/10.34721/d7xj-ch19\r
\r
""" ;
    dct:format "PDF" ;
    dct:issued "2024-03-26T05:24:07.396570"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-03-26T05:24:07.396570"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "BRIEF: Restore Urban Freshwater Systems" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/19778208-4c65-4ed4-912b-15482a3860b3/download/so2-stewardship-key-behaviours-3.pdf> ;
    dcat:byteSize 6070718.0 ;
    dcat:mediaType "application/pdf" .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/21647d65-1b60-4c3c-980f-bdda522818e5> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Protecting and Restoring Freshwater Biodiversity Across Urban Areas in Aotearoa New Zealand - Motivating Urban Residents to Volunteer for Waterway Restoration. ###\r
\r
**March 2024**\r
\r
A research brief for communications professionals, campaign managers and restoration groups \r
\r
Published by New Zealand's Biological Heritage National Science Challenge | Ngā Koiora Tuku Iho.\r
\r
**Authors:**\r
\r
  - **Zack Dorner** Department of Environmental Management, Lincoln University | Te Whare Wānaka o Aoraki   \r
  - **Lynette McLeod** School of Psychology, Speech and Hearing, University of Canterbury | Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha  \r
  - **Taciano Milfont** University of Waikato | Te Whare Wānanga o Waikato, Tauranga; Ministry for the Environment | Manatū Mō Te Taiao  \r
  - **Don Hine**, School of Psychology, Speech and Hearing, University of Canterbury | Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha  \r
  - **Pike Stahlmann-Brown** Manaaki - Whenua Landcare Research     \r
  - **Robbie Maris** University of Waikato | Te Whare Wānanga o Waikato  \r
  - **Fredrik Carlsson** Department of Economics, University of Gothenbury  \r
  - **Jane Kitson** (Ngāi Tahu, Ngāti Mamoe, Waitaha), Kitson Consulting Ltd.  \r
  - **Natasha Tassell-Matamua** (Te Ātiawa, Ngāti Makea kei Rarotonga), Centre for Indigenous Psychologies, School of Psychology, Massey University | Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa  \r
  \r
https://doi.org/10.34721/ysw8-4048  \r
  \r
""" ;
    dct:format "PDF" ;
    dct:issued "2024-03-18T21:16:41.594805"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-03-18T21:16:41.594805"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "SUMMARY: Motivating Urban Residents to Volunteer " ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/21647d65-1b60-4c3c-980f-bdda522818e5/download/ee-volunteer-water-quality-booklet-electronic.pdf> ;
    dcat:byteSize 5045304.0 ;
    dcat:mediaType "application/pdf" .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/24bd6354-1156-4032-8e1b-d107dc4193c7> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Encouraging the Installation of Rainwater Tanks in Urban Areas###\r
\r
**March 2024**\r
\r
Installing rainwater tanks is seen as a desirable decision by a household to help improve freshwater management in cities and urban areas. This research identifies the missing gaps in knowledge, to enable policymakers and professionals developing campaigns that are effective. Just like rainwater tanks, there is no one-size-fits-all.\r
""" ;
    dct:format "PDF" ;
    dct:issued "2024-03-28T01:50:51.425978"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-03-28T01:50:51.425978"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "BRIEF: Rainwater Tanks" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/24bd6354-1156-4032-8e1b-d107dc4193c7/download/so2-env-stewardship-rainwater-tanks-5.pdf> ;
    dcat:byteSize 6536754.0 ;
    dcat:mediaType "application/pdf" .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/2c42ba09-0a7a-41cf-9a91-c086e96303b8> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###The differential psychology of environmental protection/exploitation (*La psicología diferencial de la protección/explotación medioambiental*)###\r
\r
**April 2021**\r
\r
**Milfont TL 2021. The differential psychology of environmental protection/exploitation (La psicologia diferencial de la proteccion/explotacion medioambiental). Psyecology-Revista Bilingue De Psicologia Ambiental 12(3): 398-427.**\r
\r
**ABSTRACT**\r
\r
Differential psychology focuses on how individuals vary in the way they think, feel and act by measuring differences that distinguish them as more similar to themselves over time and across situations than other individuals. In this article I review and discuss available evidence on key individual differences associated with protection and exploitation of the natural environment. The discussion centres on personality traits, basic human values, time perspective and system-justifying ideological orientations. Environmental protection has been shown to be consistently related to higher levels of Openness to Experience and Agreeableness (and somewhat Honesty-Humility) traits, Self-Transcendence and Openness to Change values and future thinking. Conversely, environmental exploitation is consistently related to higher levels of conservative political orientation, Right-Wing Authoritarianism and Social Dominance Orientation. Individual differences research provides useful theoretical information that can have applied benefits in designing communication strategies to bring individuals less prone to protect the natural environment on board. Issues with jangle fallacy (measures with different names might not necessarily assess different things) and directions for future research are also discussed.\r
\r
**KEYWORDS**\r
\r
environmentalism; \r
individual differences;\r
differential psychology;\r
environmental protection;\r
environmental exploitation""" ;
    dct:format "URL" ;
    dct:issued "2024-01-08T02:13:20.898881"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-01-08T02:13:20.898881"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "PAPER: Environmental protection/exploitation" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://doi.org/10.1080/21711976.2021.1954394> .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/35418480-2968-4448-b8e7-6584743f96a5> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Protecting and Restoring Freshwater Biodiversity Across Urban Areas in Aotearoa New Zealand - Encouraging the Installation of Rainwater Tanks in Urban Areas.###\r
\r
**March 2024**\r
\r
A research brief for communications professionals and campaign managers \r
\r
Published by New Zealand's Biological Heritage National Science Challenge  | Ngā Koiora Tuku Iho, \r
\r
**Authors:**\r
\r
  - **Lynette McLeod** School of Psychology, Speech and Hearing, University of Canterbury | Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha  \r
  - **Zack Dorner** Department of Environmental Management, Lincoln University | Te Whare Wānaka o Aoraki   \r
  - **Don Hine** School of Psychology, Speech and Hearing, University of Canterbury | Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha  \r
  - **Jane Kitson** (Ngāi Tahu, Ngāti Mamoe, Waitaha), Kitson Consulting Ltd.\r
Taciano Milfont University of Waikato | Te Whare Wānanga o Waikato, Tauranga; Ministry for the Environment | Manatū Mō Te Taiao  \r
  - **Pike Stahlmann-Brown** Manaaki Whenua - Landcare Research  \r
  - **Natasha Tassell-Matamua** (Te Ātiawa, Ngāti Makea kei Rarotonga), Centre for Indigenous Psychologies, School of Psychology, Massey University | Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa  \r
  \r
https://doi.org/10.34721/xhvs-6j42  \r
\r
""" ;
    dct:format "PDF" ;
    dct:issued "2024-03-18T20:51:47.026188"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-03-18T20:51:47.026188"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "SUMMARY: Installation of Rainwater Tanks " ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/35418480-2968-4448-b8e7-6584743f96a5/download/ee-rainwater-tanks-document-electronic.pdf> ;
    dcat:byteSize 4473021.0 ;
    dcat:mediaType "application/pdf" .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/52bcff65-ffbb-4869-94b0-83d55e4ccdb2> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """#Empowering Kaitiakitanga & Environmental Stewardship#\r
\r
We're striving to empower New Zealanders to demand and enact environmental stewardship and kaitiakitanga (guardianship).\r
\r
To view website **[CLICK ON THIS LINK](https://bioheritage.nz/research/empowering-kaitiakitanga-environmental-stewardship/)**\r
\r
**NOTE:** this website will cease in 2027\r
""" ;
    dct:format "PDF" ;
    dct:issued "2024-01-08T19:53:53.612098"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-01-08T19:53:53.612098"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "WEBPAGE: SO2" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/52bcff65-ffbb-4869-94b0-83d55e4ccdb2/download/bioheritage.nz-empowering-kaitiakitanga-environmental-stewardship-2.pdf> ;
    dcat:byteSize 387926.0 ;
    dcat:mediaType "application/pdf" .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/60418ebe-8fd2-40aa-93ec-dae40d134a6e> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Scepticism of anthropogenic climate change: Additional evidence for the role of system-justifying ideologies###\r
\r
**January 2021**\r
\r
**Milfont TL, Abrahamse W, MacDonald EA 2021. [Scepticism of anthropogenic climate change: Additional evidence for the role of system-justifying ideologies](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0191886920304268/pdfft?md5=f6afbac46fd5a6ca61f0369a2a5c20dd&pid=1-s2.0-S0191886920304268-main.pdf) Personality and Individual Differences 168: 110237. **\r
\r
**ABSTRACT**\r
\r
Unwillingness of certain individuals to accept the reality of anthropogenic climate change threatens mitigation and adaptation efforts. Gender (being male), political conservatism and system-justifying ideologies are potent unique predictors of anthropogenic climate change scepticism but have typically been examined in isolation. We tested additive, interactive and mediation models of gender, political conservatism, social dominance orientation (SDO) and general system justification (GSJ) in predicting scepticism with a representative New Zealand sample (N = 8199; 74.7% New Zealand European, 55.1% female). Climate scepticism is greater for men and those who endorse system-justifying ideologies. Notably, the anti-egalitarianism dimension of SDO mediated the gender–scepticism link and the association between scepticism and this SDO dimension was stronger for higher levels of political conservatism and GSJ. Exploratory moderated mediation analyses indicated an increase in the indirect influence of being male on scepticism via SDO at increasing levels of GSJ and political conservatism.\r
\r
**KEYWORDS**\r
\r
Climate scepticism; Ideologies; Social dominance orientation; Political orientation; System justification""" ;
    dct:issued "2024-01-08T01:53:58.724511"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-01-08T01:53:58.724511"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "PAPER: Scepticism of climate change" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2020.110237> .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/642accf7-9bfc-4524-ba8a-16bf7f9f6591> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Kaitiakitanga ###\r
\r
**September 2023**\r
\r
Exploring the term's meaning and use in contemporary Aotearoa\r
""" ;
    dct:issued "2024-01-15T02:17:36.262539"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-01-15T02:17:36.262539"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "STORYMAP: Kaitiakitanga" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/cf10d52f677345d98bdfd5d8a006f6f6> .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/65311fac-e600-456a-932c-4ed123e1a6bd> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Online presentations from Crazy & Ambitious 4: Helping communities realise their biological heritage aspirations###\r
\r
**April 2024**\r
\r
Online presentations from Crazy & Ambitious 4: Helping communities realise their biological heritage aspirations, with Jane Kitson, Pike Stahlmann-Brown, Nathan Matamua and Lynette Rogers, Marina Hape from The Fairfield Project.""" ;
    dct:issued "2024-08-12T01:39:00.639333"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-08-12T01:39:00.639333"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "WEBINAR: C&A4 Biological heritage aspirations" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://youtu.be/ed1_XIerAkc> .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/7d12a56a-a3dd-42cb-918d-68fe698d023d> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Is the past recoverable from the data? Pseudoproxy modelling of uncertainties in palaeoecological data###\r
\r
**May 2024**\r
\r
**Asena Q, Perry GL, Wilmshurst JM. [Is the past recoverable from the data? Pseudoproxy modelling of uncertainties in palaeoecological data](https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/reader/10.1177/09596836241247304). The Holocene 0(0): **\r
\r
**ABSTRACT**\r
\r
There is growing concern about the response of contemporary ecosystems to increasing and novel anthropogenic pressures and environmental conditions. Palaeoecology is crucial to understanding how ecosystems have responded to past environmental changes and can inform management of contemporary ecosystems and contribute to forecasts of ecosystem responses to change. However, palaeoecological data are subject to uncertainties that arise from environmental processes, field and laboratory methods, and data processing, and that affects inferences drawn from them. Understanding how different sources of uncertainty affect the analyses of proxy records remains limited, and records are often interpreted solely qualitatively. We present a virtual ecology approach for assessing how uncertainties inherent in empirical proxy data influence statistical analyses and the inferences drawn from them. In the virtual ecology approach, both the data and the observational process are recreated in simulation to assess sampling and analytical methods. We demonstrate results from a new model for simulating core-type samples of pseudoproxies comparable to empirical proxy data but not subject to the same sources of proxy and chronological uncertainties. These ‘error-free’ pseudoproxies generated under known driving conditions have uncertainties (e.g. core mixing, sub-sampling, and proxy quantification) systematically introduced to them to assess how individual and combined sources of uncertainty influence analytical methods. Results indicate that inferences drawn from statistical analysis, such as the stability of a system, or the rate of ecological turnover, can change substantially between the ‘error-free’ pseudoproxies, and degraded and sub-sampled data. We show how our approach can advance understanding of uncertainties in palaeoecological data and how it can help shape research questions by quantifying of their influence on proxy data.\r
\r
**KEYWORDS** \r
\r
ecological modelling;\r
palaeoecology;\r
proxy system modelling;\r
pseudoproxy;\r
virtual ecology""" ;
    dct:issued "2024-07-16T03:17:43.791112"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-07-16T03:17:43.791112"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "PAPER: Pseudoproxy modelling of uncertainties" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://doi.org/10.1177/09596836241247304> .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/7ed30d3a-700c-4737-84f3-49dbc64f5bb9> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Encouraging Citizen Reporting of Pollution in Urban Waterways###\r
\r
**March 2024**\r
\r
Citizen reporting of pollution in stormwater drains and waterways can contribute to better urban freshwater management. \r
\r
But what influences behaviour, and if there are some people more receptive to reporting pollution, how is this encouraged among specific audiences?""" ;
    dct:format "PDF" ;
    dct:issued "2024-03-27T00:39:04.159993"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-03-27T00:39:04.159993"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "BRIEF: Reporting pollution in waterways " ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/7ed30d3a-700c-4737-84f3-49dbc64f5bb9/download/so2-encouraging-citizen-reporting-pollution-4.pdf> ;
    dcat:byteSize 8035119.0 ;
    dcat:mediaType "application/pdf" .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/93703497-09af-4aff-99bd-9e81f19f2c6d> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Satisfaction with the condition of local waterways in Aotearoa New Zealand###\r
\r
**September 2023**\r
\r
**Gago T, Trowsdale S, Sibley CG, & Milfont TL. 2023. [Satisfaction with the condition of local waterways in Aotearoa New Zealand](https://doi.org/10.34721/q54j-2261). **\r
\r
Freshwater bodies are closely tied to the wellbeing of New Zealanders. But the quality of freshwater is one of the most serious environmental issues the country faces and has been consistently rated as bad/poor in the last decade.\r
\r
""" ;
    dct:format "PDF" ;
    dct:issued "2023-09-27T23:13:31.475394"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2023-09-27T23:13:31.475394"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "BRIEF: Satisfaction of local waterways in NZ" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/93703497-09af-4aff-99bd-9e81f19f2c6d/download/satisfaction-with-the-condition-of-local-waterways-in-aotearoa-new-zealand-policy-brief.pdf> ;
    dcat:byteSize 2959525.0 ;
    dcat:mediaType "application/pdf" .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/9654ed55-704e-41a6-9efa-6f06093ae5ab> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Session 1 - Empowering Kaitiakitanga & Environmental Stewardship###\r
\r
**May 2022**\r
\r
To watch this presentation please **[CLICK HERE](https://youtu.be/XEA1JrmA7DY?si=ypHba6wPwQhEfI5B)**\r
\r
**Presentations from Empowering Kaitiakitanga & Environmental Stewardship:**\r
\r
- Jo Ledington (Zealandia Te Māra a Tane)\r
\r
- Lynette McLeod (McLeod Research)\r
\r
- Don Hine (University of Canterbury)\r
\r
**Guest Speaker: Ngā Pī Ka Rere**\r
\r
- Helen Warburton (University of Canterbury)\r
\r
- Kathryn McRae (AgResearch)\r
\r
- Symon Palmer (Ngāi Te Rangi; Te Herenga Waka - Victoria University of Wellington)\r
\r
- Aisling Rayne (University of Otago)""" ;
    dct:issued "2024-01-17T03:53:48.503837"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-01-17T03:53:48.503837"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "WEBINAR: Crazy & Ambitious 3" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://youtu.be/XEA1JrmA7DY?si=ypHba6wPwQhEfI5B> .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/97f51330-ac6a-4ca3-a892-2ec894e80f53> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Protecting and Restoring Freshwater Biodiversity Across Urban Areas in Aotearoa New Zealand - Enhancing public reporting of pollution in urban stormwater drains and waterways.###\r
\r
**March 2024**\r
\r
A research brief for communications professionals and campaign managers\r
\r
Published by New Zealand's Biological Heritage National Science Challenge | Ngā Koiora Tuku Iho.\r
\r
\r
**Authors:**\r
\r
  - **Lynette McLeod & Don Hine** School of Psychology, Speech and Hearing, University of Canterbury | Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha  \r
  - **Taciano Milfont** University of Waikato | Te Whare Wānanga o Waikato, Tauranga; Ministry for the Environment | Manatū Mō Te Taiao  \r
  - **Zack Dorner** Department of Environmental Management, Lincoln University | Te Whare Wānaka o Aoraki  \r
  - **Natasha Tassell-Matamua** (Te Ātiawa, Ngāti Makea kei Rarotonga), Centre for Indigenous Psychologies, School of Psychology, Massey University | Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa  \r
  - **Robbie Maris** University of Waikato | Te Whare Wānanga o Waikato  \r
  - **Jane Kitson** (Ngāi Tahu, Ngāti Mamoe, Waitaha), Kitson Consulting Ltd.  \r
  - **Pike Stahlmann-Brown** Manaaki Whenua - Landcare Research  \r
  \r
 https://doi.org/10.34721/vrtf-ag25  \r
  """ ;
    dct:format "PDF" ;
    dct:issued "2024-03-18T03:50:04.591582"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-03-18T03:50:04.591582"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "SUMMARY: Enhancing public reporting of pollution" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/97f51330-ac6a-4ca3-a892-2ec894e80f53/download/ee-stromwater-pollution-brochure-electronic.pdf> ;
    dcat:byteSize 5749203.0 ;
    dcat:mediaType "application/pdf" .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/9d49f56d-8231-4f52-ad6a-f81fa522bef5> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Online presentation from Crazy & Ambitious 4: Bio-cultural approach to biodiversity monitoring###\r
\r
**April 2024**\r
\r
Online presentation from Crazy & Ambitious 4: Bio-cultural approach to biodiversity monitoring, with Dion Pou, Te Atatu Marae Whanau Committee and Rivercare Te Wai o Pareira.""" ;
    dct:issued "2024-08-12T02:06:08.881133"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-08-12T02:06:08.881133"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "WEBINAR: C&A4 Bio-cultural biodiversity monitoring" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://youtu.be/bUkm5kPmwO4> .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/a773a70e-bf55-4b58-8f56-5f0ee702e12d> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Evaluating Behaviour Change Interventions: A Practical Guide###\r
\r
**2023**\r
\r
**McLeod LJ, Howard TM, Driver AB, Hine DW 2023. Evaluating Behaviour Change Interventions: A Practical Guide, Centre for Invasive Species Solutions. 38 p.**\r
\r
**ABSTRACT** \r
\r
Scientists are very good at developing technologies and recommended best practices for managing sustainable land management problems. But these proposed solutions will fail unless the public – land managers and community members – are sufficiently empowered and motivated to modify behaviours and adopt new approaches.\r
\r
Changing behaviour, and sustaining these changes over time, is a difficult process. Educating the public about adverse impacts, and providing information about control strategies, is rarely enough.\r
\r
Behaviour change interventions require a more sophisticated approach, informed by behavioural sciences. Social psychology and behavioural economics have generated an array of intervention strategies and behaviour change techniques designed to increase audience understanding, engagement and, ultimately, adoption of desired behaviours.\r
\r
‘Designing Behaviour Change Interventions for Sustainable Land Management: A Practical Guide’ (Hine, McLeod and Driver, 2022) provides a systematic approach for practitioners to develop new behaviour change interventions.\r
\r
There are four principles to follow:\r
\r
1. Focus on behaviour.\r
\r
2. Know your audience.\r
\r
3. Match your interventions to the primary causes of behaviour.\r
\r
4. Evaluate, review and reflect.\r
\r
This guide focuses on the principle ‘Evaluate, review and reflect and reflect’. It provides practitioners with a systematic approach for developing and implementing an appropriate evaluation plan for their intervention. A practical case study (involving domestic cat management) is used throughout, to demonstrate the theory content.""" ;
    dct:issued "2024-07-16T04:20:25.570938"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-07-16T04:20:25.570938"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "BOOK: Evaluating Behaviour Change Interventions" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/55328> .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/a8dda6f1-3db4-4717-801e-5eea2a320d56> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Environmental stewardship: A systematic scoping review###\r
\r
**May 2024**\r
\r
**McLeod LJ, Kitson JC, Dorner Z, Tassell-Matamua NA, Stahlmann-Brown P, Milfont TL, Hine DW 2024. [Environmental stewardship: A systematic scoping review](https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0284255&type=printable). PLoS One 19(5): e0284255.** https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0284255\r
\r
**ABSTRACT**\r
\r
Environmental stewardship is a term describing both the philosophy and the actions required to protect, restore, and sustainably use natural resources for the future benefit of the environment and society. In this paper, we review the environmental science literature to map the types of practical actions that are identified as ‘environmental stewardship’ using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines for scoping reviews. We specifically mapped: 1) the type of actions and outcomes targeting the natural environment that have been categorized as environmental stewardship, 2) the main actors, and the underlying factors influencing their environmental stewardship actions, and 3) the methods used to mobilize environmental stewardship actions once these factors are known. From the 77 selected articles, we found the term environmental stewardship encompassed a multitude of different actions, undertaken by a range of actors and addressing an array of issues that impact biodiversity on the land and in the water. These stewardship actions were conducted on both privately-owned and publicly managed lands and waterways, and across rural and urban landscapes. Despite many studies identifying characteristics and underlying behavioral factors that predicted actors’ participation in stewardship actions, there were few studies formally evaluating interventions to increase stewardship. Our review highlighted the term environmental stewardship is not embraced by all and is viewed by some as being inconsistent with aspects of indigenous worldviews. A better understanding of the concept of environmental stewardship and continued practical research into its practice is fundamental to empowering people to demand and enact environmental stewardship as well as for evaluating the success of their actions.\r
\r
**KEYWORDS**\r
\r
Environmental Stewardship;\r
Conservation;\r
Natural Resources;\r
Biodiversity;\r
Rural Areas;\r
Urban Areas;\r
Indigenous Perspectives;\r
Behavioral Factors\r
\r
""" ;
    dct:issued "2024-07-25T03:34:55.608551"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-07-25T03:34:55.608551"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "PAPER: Environmental stewardship: A systematic scoping review" .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/e58849cc-a52b-421d-842f-b9b8610192d8> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """Source code (NetLogo and R) for re-implementation of Rogers (1988) model in Perry et al."Representing agent decision-making in social-ecological models: the importance of context"  \r
  \r
https://figshare.com/s/322507fb443673d9df74""" ;
    dct:issued "2024-07-03T04:15:17.208309"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-07-03T04:15:17.208309"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "DATA: Source code (NetLogo and R)" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://figshare.com/s/322507fb443673d9df74> .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/dataset/97f0d7ab-0d8c-47f8-b117-763d74d82ce5/resource/fd55c912-f370-417d-bdd7-4d91cd5c4c8d> a dcat:Distribution ;
    dct:description """###Designing Community Surveys for Behaviour Change Research: A Practical Guide###\r
\r
**2023**\r
\r
**McLeod LJ, Driver AB, Hine DW 2022. Designing Community Surveys for Behaviour Change Research: A Practical Guide, Centre for Invasive Species Solutions. 38 p.**\r
\r
**ABSTRACT**\r
\r
An impressive set of technologies and recommended management best practices have been developed for landscape management. All these proposed solutions will fail unless the public – land managers and community members – are sufficiently empowered and motivated to change behaviours and adopt new approaches.\r
\r
Changing behaviour, and sustaining it over time, can be difficult. Social psychology and behavioural economics have generated an array of intervention strategies and behaviour change techniques to increase audience understanding,\r
engagement and, ultimately, adoption of desired behaviours. Hine, McLeod and Driver (2022) proposed four guiding principles for developing behaviour change interventions:\r
\r
1. Focus on behaviour.\r
2. Know your audience.\r
3. Match your interventions to the primary causes of behaviour.\r
4. Evaluate, review and reflect.\r
\r
This guide focuses on an important research tool – community surveys. Surveys can collect information on current behaviours and intentions and identify factors that encourage or impede engagement in desired behaviours. In short, surveys provide essential background for designing behaviour change interventions.""" ;
    dct:issued "2024-07-16T04:23:29.592082"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:modified "2024-07-16T04:23:29.592082"^^xsd:dateTime ;
    dct:title "BOOK: Surveys for Behaviour Change Research" ;
    dcat:accessURL <https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/55202> .

<https://data.bioheritage.nz/organization/c222f9d0-5df7-4788-8cf6-e18fd5bd0116> a foaf:Organization ;
    foaf:name "Challenge Inventory" .

