Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Watershed book from freshwater fisheries expert

 A landmark publication by New Zealand’s most distinguished freshwater fish expert, Dr R. M. (Bob) McDowall, will be released posthumously this week.
Published by Canterbury University Press in association with the National Institute for Water and Atmospheric Research, Ikawai: Freshwater fishes in Māori culture and economy draws together all that has ever been written about the role of freshwater fishes in the lives of early Māori.
Until his untimely death in February this year, Dr McDowall was a widely published author and acknowledged world authority on the taxonomy and biogeography of New Zealand’s freshwater fish. During his 40-year career with the Marine Department, the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries and NIWA, he wrote 230 papers (in 66 different journals), 14 books and more than 300 reports and popular articles on freshwater fish.
Dr McDowall was working on Ikawai when he passed away. NIWA colleague Dr Don Jellyman said: “Māori have a saying that when a respected person dies, a giant tree has fallen in the forest, but it’s falling makes space for new growth. Bob was that giant in freshwater fisheries. His legacy lives on in his writings and the many students and researchers who are able to build upon his scientific discoveries.”
Dr McDowall made it his life’s work to read every word ever written on the subject of Māori fisheries, from passing references in explorers’ diaries to the recent reports of the Waitangi Tribunal. With a foreword by Sir Tumu Te Heuheu, Ikawai draws Dr McDowall’s research together to create an essential resource for anyone interested in New Zealand freshwater fishes, or the lives and livelihood of Māori.
Ikawai also illustrates the beauty associated with Māori fisheries through an extraordinary collection of photographs and artworks of fish and fishing artefacts, as well as historical images hidden away in archives, libraries and photographic collections.
Ikawai will be launched tomorrow evening (Wednesday 12 October) by the Minister of Science and Technology, Hon Dr Wayne Mapp, at the Museum of New Zealand, Te Papa Tongarewa.
About the author:
Dr McDowall’s publications on this fish fauna date from the 1960s, and several of his books became standard reference works. Bob gained an MSc from Victoria University of Wellington and a PhD from Harvard University, and was Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand. He passed away in February 2011.
  Ikawai: Freshwater fishes in Māori culture and economy by R. M. McDowall
Canterbury University Press
R  $130, hardback, 832pp, 258 x 190mm, full colour
ISBN 978-1-877257-86-5  

2 comments:

Keri Hulme said...

I first learned of this book quite a while ago when Rob McDowell was in Okarito. He mentioned that he had been working on a book about freshwater fish & their place in Maori economy.

Last month, I was utterly delighted to see, at the Hokitika Museum's excellent REAL exhibition on - whitebait! - that "Ikawai" was forthcoming.

McDowell gave me "The Anatomy & Physiology of Fish"( his undergraduate textbook) and 2 others of his own works (I had the rest.) I mourn that he is dead: I am joyful that he gives us this last great gift.

Buying this? Sure as 'bait run into rivers (except for the landbound species of course...)

Tony Eldon said...

This is Bob's final, and most magnificent contribution to New Zealand's fisheries literature. But it is far more than that. I was personally very familiar with most of the contents of the early chapters, though these will be of immense interest to others unfamiliar with the field. From about chapter 20 onwards, the book is a thought provoking exposè of colonial (and some more recent)Pakeha treatment of Maori and their fisheries. It reveals a deep canyon of misunderstanding and cavalier behaviour at the best level, and chicanary at the worst level. If you are a died-in-the-wool redneck pakiha, you will hate this book. If you can approach it with a semblence of an an open mind, you will be humbled; and you may well adopt a new line of thought with regard to Maori fisheries claims.