Māori knowledge of animals is vast. This article is an introduction to Māori knowledge of a selected sample of animal species indigenous to Aotearoa.
Mātauranga Māori about animals known to tūpuna is presented in six groupings:
- Kurī
- Kiore
- Ngā manu a Tānemahuta (featuring pīwakawaka, tūī, kererū, rūrū, kōtare, tītī and toroa)
- Ngā ika a Tangaroa (featuring makō and tohorā)
- Ngārara – te aitanga a Punga
- Te aitanga pepeke.
About Māori animal categories
At times, Māori animal categories contravene those of science such as grouping tohorā (whales) under ika. Kurī (dog) and kiore (rat) come first, given their importance as the two mammals purposely brought across the Pacific Ocean to Aotearoa by the voyaging ancestors of Māori. The other four categories are based on whakapapa and the ancestors of animals.
These summaries provide a sampling of Māori knowledge of animals, not a comprehensive encyclopaedia, but omit many others including the eel, octopus and marine mammals.
The categories correspond to some of the major species and groups of animals that were known to Māori before the arrival of the European through specific indigenous frameworks of knowledge based on whakapapa. Relationships between humans and animals, embedded in whakapapa, make sense of the specific information and knowledge of animals amassed by our ancestors about the animals of Aotearoa.
Overlaps between mātauranga Māori and science
This is only a taster of the knowledge collected by tūpuna about the animals of Aotearoa by detailed empirical observation, which is one of the trademarks of science. There is general agreement that there are similarities and overlaps between mātauranga Māori and science. Perhaps even more interesting are the ways in which Māori knowledge is different from science.
Whakapapa, tapu and mana
Māori knowledge of animals is underpinned by whakapapa, the organising principle of reality in te ao Māori, on which stand the two basic concepts of tapu and mana. Making a new fishing net was declaring a group’s intention to harness the power of nature and ngā atua, hence it was an activity governed by the law of tapu, which dictates how people behave in relation to that activity. A successful hunter or fisher had mana since they showed their ability to turn that power to their own ends. Mana is related to a person’s ability to keep the cosmic forces of ngā atua in balance (utu).
In some ways, whakapapa works as a Māori alternative to evolutionary theory in biology. Dogs, rats and humans, for example, are considered to be closely related not only in terms of phylogeny but also whakapapa. In Māori iconography, whakapapa is represented by the double spiral motif called takarangi, with each generation represented by a notch between the two spiral lines. An icon that mimics the molecular structure of DNA makes a tantalising connection between whakapapa and genetic inheritance at the heart of evolutionary theory.
In our DNA, we literally carry our ancestors and our evolutionary links to other animals. Whakapapa in this sense is like an ethical Indigenous version of the concept of evolution. Our tūpuna fully utilised the animals of Aotearoa to survive and thrive but did so while remaining aware of their relationships with animals through whakapapa.
Māori knowledge of the natural world includes traditional narratives that reinforce the overall structure of the traditional Māori cosmos as based on dualities that operate at many levels, from the cosmic to the psychological. Many traditional stories tell of primal ecological battles – between different factions of the birds, fish, reptiles, insects and others – that help explain the natural world of Aotearoa encountered by tūpuna Māori.
Ngā Kararehe o Aotearoa: He Mātauranga, he Matatika
The resource Ngā Kararehe o Aotearoa: He Mātauranga, he Matatika is available as downloadable bilingual PDFs:
- Ngā Kararehe o Aotearoa, He Mātauranga, he Matatika | A combined resource of scientist profiles, knowledge of animals, animal ethics and teacher support material
- Ngā kaikōrero tokoono | Profiles of Māori scientists who work with animals
- Ngā huatau Māori mō ngā matatika kararehe me ngā pānga ki ngā Wh e Toru | Māori perspectives of animal ethics and the Three R’s
- Te mātauranga Māori mō ngā kararehe | Māori knowledge of the Animals of Aotearoa
- Te kupu taka, ngā rauemi mō te akomanga me ngā kupu aratohu mā te Kaiako | Teacher guidance, glossary and crossword activity
Download the te reo Māori student PDFs below:
Related content
Watch the recorded webinar Animals of Aotearoa with Professor Georgina Tuari Stewart and Dr Sally Birdsall.
Te tapa ingoa is a Connected article that explores how early Māori named and grouped the plants and animals they found around them.
The article Māori concepts for animal ethics – introduction brings together resources that explore animal ethics with a kaupapa Māori approach.
Activity ideas
These activities support learning about the six animal groupings represented in this article:
- Māori knowledge of animals – local contexts
- Māori knowledge of animals – comprehending texts
- Māori knowledge of animals – crossword puzzles
- Māori knowledge of animals – provocative questions
In Insect mihi, students write a formal introduction for an insect species of their choice, including information about the insect’s relationship to other animals and also the land.
Reference
Stewart, G. T. (2024). Animals of Aotearoa: Kaupapa Māori Summaries. Anthrozoös, 37(1), 1–17. https://doi.org/10.1080/08927936.2023.2254552
Acknowledgement
This content has been developed by Professor Georgina Tuari Stewart (Ngāti Kura, Ngāpuhi-nui-tonu, Pare Hauraki), Auckland University of Technology, and Dr Sally Birdsall, University of Auckland, with funding and support from the Ministry for Primary Industries – Manatū Ahu Matua and the Australian and New Zealand Council for the Care of Animals in Research and Teaching (ANZCCART).