Herald on Sunday

Have dogs, will kill rats

DoC — and dogs — lead the way in wiping out pests on remote Atlantic island.

- By Jamie Morton

Lying 9000km away in the southern Atlantic Ocean, the rugged and windswept island of South Georgia held scant meaning for New Zealand.

But New Zealand now means much to it, after our worldrenow­ned island conservati­on expertise helped the British territory rid itself of rodents for the first time in 200 years.

The remarkable feat has left the conservati­on world abuzz, and offers valuable lessons for New Zealand’s bold bid to be free of pest predators by the middle of this century. Covering 108,723ha, the South Georgia Heritage Trust’s seven-year project was more than eight times larger than any other rodent eradicatio­n area ever.

Brought ashore by sealing and whaling vessels from the late 18th century, rats and mice were a serious threat to wildlife, including two unique bird species.

The staged eradicatio­n technique was developed in New Zealand and many Kiwis were involved in the project: field biologists doing baseline surveys, planners helping map the entire operation — and Department of Conservati­on dog handler Miriam Ritchie.

From summer and autumn, Ritchie and faithful Will and Ahu trekked hundreds of kilometres, searching for traces of rodents that had survived poison aerial drops.

That meant sleeping in tents and huts, rising early to eat dry and canned food, and crossing rocky, tussocked landscapes to check sites.

Perched on the edge of the Antarctic Circle, South Georgia’s climate plunged to an average -4.9C over winter, but in summer could top 9C.

“It was nowhere near as cold as I was expecting,” said Ritchie, whose 16 years as a DoC dog handler have taken her to our own subantarct­ic islands. “We had beautiful days when I was wearing just shorts and a singlet, but we always had a pack full, including some serious wet weather gear.”

The trip, which put her up close to elephant seals and emperor penguins, was a career highlight.

“The island was very grand and awesome — there were huge mountain peaks in the background, but it was mostly barren, with no trees or shrubs, and just tussock, moss, lichen and lots scree.”

Dr James Russell, a leading island conservati­on expert at the Auckland University, said Kiwis continued to of push boundaries in the field, having just cleared mice from Antipodes Island.

“But there was also an opportunit­y on South Georgia for the New Zealanders to be involved in trialling a staged approach where the eradicatio­n of rodents was broken down into smaller parts,” he said.

“This will likely be critical for achieving a Predator Free NZ.” Particular­ly, the project had shown that features such as glaciers could be used as “barriers to movement”, said Brent Beaven, DoC’s Predator Free 2050 programme manager.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand