New Council Member – Nic Rawlence
June 23rd, 2025
I grew up in Nelson and Golden Bay surrounded by birds above ground and the bones of extinct birds in caves below ground. I spent much of my childhood in the outdoors amongst nature and sailing in Tasman Bay. Every family road trip was a lesson in natural history, geology, palaeontology, and history, something that I’ve continued with my kids.
After completing a degree in Biomedical Science at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand’s birds beckoned and I embarked on a Masters research project focusing on the evolutionary history of kakariki. I spent many weekends on Mana and Matiu Somes Island, and conducted fieldwork in the subantarctic and at the Kermadec Islands, experiences that I will never forget. A PhD at the University of Adelaide followed where I used ancient DNA and palaeontology to reconstruct the diet and plumage of New Zealand’s extinct moa, as well as investigating the impacts of climate and habitat change through time on these giant birds.
In 2013 my wife and I made the move to back to New Zealand where I established the Otago Palaeogenetics Lab at the University of Otago. My lab reconstructs what New Zealand’s ecosystems were like from hundreds of years to tens of millions of years ago; how our unique living and extinct birds (and other animals) responded to our dynamic geological, climatic and human history; and how we can use that information for evidence-based conservation management.
I passionately believe in science communication, and regularly provide expert commentary in all forms of media from print to radio and television, even busting a few myths now and then.
For contact details of current Council members refer to https://www.birdsnz.org.nz/contact/