Online conservation game proves a hit
Media release
6 August 2016
Online conservation game proves a hit
An online game developed to teach users
about threats to whio in the wild is proving wildly
popular.
DOC and Genesis Energy have worked together to develop the game, called “Whio Boot Camp” for Conservation Week, which runs from 10-18 September.
In a style reminiscent of Super Mario, users navigate the challenges of life as a whio, swimming, flying, eating and avoiding stoats in order to ‘make it’ in the wild. At the end of the game, successful players earn the chance to enter a competition to be a whio ranger for a day – interacting out in the wild with real whio.
The game has proved very popular. In the two weeks the game has been live, over 5000 individuals have attempted the game. That’s already a 59% increase in players compared to the whole period the ‘Find a Whio’ game ran last year.
This is the first year the ‘Whio Boot Camp’ game has run. In previous years a different game called ‘Find a Whio’ was promoted which involved finding whio hidden on a map of New Zealand. This year we wanted to develop something new and more interactive.
The Whio Forever team searched for months to find a suitable game developer, and eventually landed with Auckland based developer Dot Dot. Dot Dot took the initial ideas and concepts from the Whio Forever team, did some background research into the life of a whio and fleshed it out into a playable game.
DOC Threatened Species Ambassador Nic Toki says that the game is fun and educational and a great way of using technology to engage people in conservation. “I found the game thoroughly addictive, it’s the type of thing you play over and over again, and it is a great way of illustrating the challenges our precious whio face to survive”.
The game and
competition to win a whio adventure trip for two will be
open to play until the 18th of September.
Follow this
link to play the game www.doc.govt.nz/whiobootcamp
The game is an initiative developed out of the partnership between Genesis Energy and the Department of Conservation. The two organisations are working together to secure the future of this unique vulnerable native bird. Operating under the name of Whio Forever this partnership is fast tracking implementation of the national Whio Recovery Plan to protect whio and increase public awareness.
Ends
Background Information on
whio
• The whio is a threatened species of
native duck that is only found in New Zealand’s fast
flowing waters. Featured on New Zealand’s $10 note and
with an estimated nationwide population of less than 2500
birds, whio are rarer than kiwi.
• Whio are adapted to
live on fast-flowing rivers so finding whio means you will
also find clean, fast-flowing water with a good supply of
underwater insects.
• This makes whio important
indicators of ecosystem health – they only exist where
there is high quality clean and healthy
waterways.
Whio Forever
• Genesis
Energy has a strong historic association with whio through
the Tongariro Power Scheme and in 2010 this association grew
through the establishment of Whio Awareness Month
(March).
• Today, Genesis Energy and the Department of
Conservation (DOC) continue their partnership through The
Whio Forever Programme, which aims to secure the future of
whio in the wild and ensure New Zealanders understand and
value of whio in our rivers.
• The support of Genesis
Energy and the work of DOC has enabled the Whio Recovery
Plan to be implemented.
Conservation Issue
• The whio are eaten by stoats, ferrets
and cats, with the largest impact during nesting time when
eggs, young and females are vulnerable, and also when
females are in moult and can’t fly.
• Extensive
trapping can manage these predators and work in key whio
habitats by DOC and Genesis Energy on the Whio Forever
Project has already seen an increase in whio
numbers.
• Whio cannot be moved to predator-free
islands like other species because of their reliance on
large fast-flowing rivers.
• Pairs occupy approximately
1km of water – so they need a lot of river to sustain a
large population and they fiercely defend their territories,
which makes it difficult to put them with other ducks in
captivity.
• They are susceptible to flood events
which, destroy nests, fragment broods and wash away their
valued food
source.