Lizard News

Volunteers lend a hand to protect our beaches

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Almost 70,000 native plants were dug into Bay of Plenty sand dunes this winter by local volunteers.

The plantings, part of Coast Care Bay of Plenty, will help regenerate sand dunes and ensure they are not lost to erosion, weather or careless behaviour across beaches.

“We couldn’t have done it without the help of our volunteers so a huge thank you to them,” Coast Care Bay of Plenty Regional Coordinato­r Paul Greenshiel­ds said.

“Our coastal sand dunes are one of the most degraded natural ecosystems in New Zealand yet they are an integral part of our beaches so we have to actively work to protect and regenerate them.

“We know that native sand dune plants play a vital role in maintainin­g the dunes, by binding light blowing sand onto the beach, and making sand dunes more stable. Without these plants, the sand blows away and dunes disappear – leaving the land vulnerable to weather and wave surges.”

Mr Greenshiel­ds said over 4,300 volunteers and another 2,700 school students spent 7895 hours to get the plants into the ground between June and September.

In the Bay of Plenty region, from Waihī to the East Cape, there is just 3,000 hectares of coastal sand dune plants left compared to 12,000 hectares pre humans.

Coast Care Bay of Plenty programme started 25 years ago and since then 250,000 volunteers have donated 300,000 hrs of their time to plant 1.5million plants along the sandy coastline of the Bay of Plenty.

“This work is essential if we want beaches to enjoy in the future. In the mid 90's the coastline was eroded, the dunes were not performing as they should and the community and it's infrastruc­ture was under threat with every large storm that would hit,” Mr Greenshiel­ds said.

The native sand dune plants dug back into sand dunes included pīngao, spiniflex and pōhuehue. They also provide habitat for some of New Zealand native and endemic coastal flora and fauna.

“Volunteers have helped to build a resilient community by increasing the performanc­e of the dune system and creating a natural buffer to sea level rise and the effect of climate change,” he said.

 ?? PHOTO: BoPRC. ?? Volunteers help plant native sand dune plants at Waihī Beach earlier this year.
PHOTO: BoPRC. Volunteers help plant native sand dune plants at Waihī Beach earlier this year.

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