Otago Daily Times

Native plants, traps destroyed in fire

LAKE OHAU

- TESS BRUNTON

A LAKE Ohau resident says thousands of dollars worth of native plants and 80 predator traps went up in smoke when fire tore through the village last month.

More than 5000 hectares and 48 buildings were burnt in the blaze.

Before the fire, Lake Ohau was surrounded by dryland with tussocks and shrubs, special plants that could survive the dry summers and bitterly cold winters. Beech forest grew down to the lake shore and along three creeks that drain the hills behind the village.

It was home to native birds, lizards and insects.

Ohau Conservati­on Trust is a registered charity that has been removing wilding pines, planting native seedlings and setting possum traps around the village and lake over the past 16 years.

Each autumn, the trust runs planting sessions with volunteers.

‘‘We had a lot of plantings along from the village, up the road and along the lake edge. We've recently put beech trees in across the road from the village,’’ chairwoman Vivienne SmithCampb­ell said.

‘‘About 10 years ago, volunteers put in about 2000 seedlings. It was a huge job. Now all you can see of them is wire rabbit protector cages that protected them very well from the rabbits but didn't do much when the fire came through. Plants are gone.’’

There was not much left of their years of hard work.

‘‘It's pretty grim, actually, especially some of the areas along the lake shore,’’ she said.

‘‘At the moment, there's just a lot of black, charred remains of plants sticking up. Not much has survived, really.’’

Her family home at the Lake Ohau village was lost to the fire, along with recently arrived predator traps stored next to it.

‘‘We had 80 traps made for catching things like stoats and ferrets, and we were going to put them up in the bush gullies, up on the hill in the beech forests, and they'd been made for us by the South Otago Correction­s facility.

‘‘We're really pleased with that arrangemen­t. The inmates at the Correction­s facility there were learning skills and making the traps and we were the beneficiar­ies of getting the traps to come out and protect the natural environmen­t.’’

She estimated about $20,000 worth of plants and traps were lost in the fire.

That was a significan­t setback for conservati­on in the area — and quite a bit of fundraisin­g — as the trust relied on donations and grants, she said.

This weekend, the trust will do an audit to find out how many of the 100 possum traps already out in the beech forest have survived.

They regularly catch possums, which gravitate towards native mistletoe. Lake Ohau is a place of national significan­ce for the species.

Protecting the mistletoe had been a big project for the trust and she hoped some of the traps had survived.

‘‘This is a really dryland natural environmen­t and typically the plants that live here they don't grow that quickly because they get stressed in the summer and in the winter with the hot and then the cold, so it is a really slow growing environmen­t.

‘‘There's a lot of birds, lizards and insects that have lost habitat and food sources so it's going to take quite a while to come back naturally.’’

There are signs of life slowly emerging — bracken fern, grass and weeds are all popping up.

‘‘We want to replant and continue our work. It's really important to restore this environmen­t but it's also important for us all psychologi­cally. There's something very healing about working with the land and seeing things grow. I feel it myself.

‘‘At the moment, the landscape does look black and bleak. Nature has a way of coming back and when people see little natives growing, hopefully it will help the community heal.’’

The Ohau Conservati­on Trust has set a page on its website to help people give towards native plants and predator traps.

‘‘By giving a donation to the trust, they can help Lake Ohau recover.’’ — RNZ

 ?? PHOTO: OHAU CONSERVATI­ON TRUST ?? Hard work lost . . . Ohau Conservati­on Trust chairwoman Vivienne SmithCampb­ell.
PHOTO: OHAU CONSERVATI­ON TRUST Hard work lost . . . Ohau Conservati­on Trust chairwoman Vivienne SmithCampb­ell.

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