From February 1991 to May 2010, Miskelly was a conservancy advisory scientist, technical support manager, and conservation analyst with the Department of Conservation (DOC),[3][4] including representing DOC on the board of the Karori Sanctuary Trust (the operator of Zealandia) from 1998 to 2010. He then moved to the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, where he became curator of vertebrates. He was the driving force behind the creation of the New Zealand Birds Online website, launched in 2013. Over a hundred expert authors and over 500 photographers have been involved in creating this digital encyclopedia, which records all of New Zealand's bird species (extant or extinct). As of December 2024[update], Miskelly remains as the site administrator.[5][6]
In 2018, Miskelly was part of a team of scientists that first described the critically endangered diving petrel species Whenua Hou diving petrel (Pelecanoides whenuahouensis) from Codfish Island / Whenua Hou.[9] This taxon was originally considered a population of the broad-billed guillemot petrel (Pelecanoides georgicus).
Over the period November 2023 to March 2024, Miskelly undertook a trek along the full 3,000 kilometres (1,900 mi) length of the Te Araroa Trail from Cape Reinga to Bluff making observations of birds at 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) intervals along the way. The observations were reported progressively in blog posts during the walk.[10]
In 2008 he edited the book Chatham Islands: Heritage and Conservation.[11][12]
In 2020, along with co-author Craig Symes, Miskelly edited a collection of papers entitled Lost Gold: Ornithology of the subantarctic Auckland Islands.[13][14]
Awards
In 2021, Miskelly and his co-author Craig Symes won the Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales Whitley Award for the book Lost Gold: Ornithology of the subantarctic Auckland Islands.[15]
^Miskelly, Colin M. (1989). Social and environmental constraints on breeding by New Zealand snipe Coenocorypha aucklandica (PhD thesis). University of Canterbury. doi:10.26021/8271. hdl:10092/5822.