KEY POINTS:
Chris Martin picked up four wickets and Jacob Oram three as the Black Caps dismissed Bangladesh for 137 in Dunedin today.
After being asked to bat first at Dunedin's University Oval the tourists went to lunch at 88 for four.
After the break they quickly crumbled with only opener Tamim Iqbal, who scored 53 on debut, offering any resistance.
The last four wickets fell for 37 runs, with seamer Kyle Mills taking the last two to fall.
Bangladesh's innings lasted less than 47 overs.
Matthew Bell, playing his first test in six years, played a confident first scoring shot on his return to the line-up, pulling opening bowler Shahadat Hossain for a boundary in his second over.
But Bangladesh made the breakthrough soon after when Craig Cumming was trapped lbw by Sajidul Islam for just one.
Bell continued to attack the opening bowling striking three fours on his way to 13 not out, with Peter Fulton on two at the other end, taking New Zealand to 17 for one at tea.
Earlier captain Daniel Vettori's dream run with the coin continued, and after deciding to bowl first, Bangladesh lost the key wickets of Mohammad Ashraful and Habibul Bashar in quick succession to temper the underdogs expansive approach.
New Zealand needed just 14 balls to start the rot when Chris Martin had debutant opener Zunaed Siddique caught at slip by Stephen Fleming.
Bashar, one of three reinforcements joining the tour party after the one-day series, immediately signalled his attacking intent by attempting to hook the first two balls he faced.
He eventually connected twice to top edge sixes to the third man and fine leg fence.
Bangladesh scored 43 after eight overs at a respectable clip as Bashar delighted in targeting the short boundaries.
However, he became Martin's second victim, caught at the wicket by Brendon McCullum for 23 and with the first ball of his next over key batsman Mohammad Ashraful was adjudged leg before wicket after padding up and offering no shot.
Ashraful's demise for a first ball duck had Bangladesh reeling at 47 for three.
Shahriar Nafees blocked the hattrick ball, and worked his way to 16 sharing a 35 run partnership with opener Tamim Iqbal, before becoming the fourth wicket to fall.
- NZPA