The New Zealand Herald

Hope as native birds double

20-year DoC project in South Island valley shows value of pest control

- Jamie Morton environmen­t

A20-year effort at the Department of Conservati­on’s longeststu­died area for pest control has led to native bird numbers doubling — an encouragin­g sign for the nation’s predator-free 2050 mission.

A programme in South Westland’s Landsborou­gh valley is DoC’s longest study charting the response of birds to pest control, giving conservati­on scientists insights into what approaches work in beating back predators.

Predator control began in the valley in 1998 after the effect of predators on birdlife was observed.

Since then, DoC has carried out valley-wide trapping and six aerial 1080 operations timed with rising rodent levels. The most recent two, in 2014 and 2016, covered all the valley.

The monitoring programme involved a team of bird experts doing 175 fiveminute bird counts each spring at fixed points in the valley, providing an index of relative bird numbers.

All native birds showed increasing or stable population trends apart from two species — tautou (silvereye or waxeye) and the migratory long-tailed cuckoo (koekoea¯) — which had declined.

Numbers of mohua (yellowhead), tuı¯ (parson bird), korimako (bellbird), pı¯pipi (brown creeper), tı¯titipounam­u (rifleman), riroriro ( grey warbler) and ka¯ka¯riki (yellow-crowned parakeet) have all steadily increased during the past 20 years in response to a sustained programme to suppress rats, stoats and possums.

Other species — ka¯ka¯ (bush parrot), pı¯wakawaka (fantail), ngirungiru (tomtit) and kereru (wood pigeon) — have stayed stable.

“Mohua is one of the most threatened birds there and has increased 24-fold over the time of the study — going from 14 to 338 birds in the monitoring area,” Conservati­on Minister Eugenie Sage said.

“These results highlight that where we control pests over whole valleys and forests, we can turn around the fortunes of our native birds and help address our biodiversi­ty crisis where 82 per cent of our birds are threatened or at risk of extinction.”

Sage said new funding for DoC of $181.6 million over four years would allow more of the work to happen. A specific allocation of $81.3m dedicated to predator control would result in 1.85 million hectares — an area larger than Northland and Auckland combined — where predators were kept low on an ongoing basis.

“The investment reflects New Zealand’s longstandi­ng commitment to the internatio­nal Convention on Biological Diversity, and our responsibi­lity to protect the species and ecosystems found nowhere else in the world.”

The results follow other new data from a Landcare Research-led meta-analysis of 23 sanctuarie­s, three “mainland islands” and other published studies, showing pest control was working better for some natives than others. Birds that benefited most were typically deeply endemic species, such as kiwi, North Island ko¯kako and hı¯hı¯. There were weaker benefits among more recently endemic species, like tuı¯ and tomtit. Worst off were “recent natives” — including grey warbler, silvereye and fantail — whose tallies often show little effect or even decline in response to control. Generally, pest control tended to bring greater benefits within fenced sanctuarie­s where mammal pests had been wiped out, compared with unfenced mainland islands where some pests were being kept at low levels.

New Zealand has a bold goal of ridding itself of possums, rats and stoats by 2050.

By 2025 it aims to sweep pests from a further million ha, to develop a scientific breakthrou­gh that could exterminat­e at least one mammalian predator, to show areas of more than 20,000ha could be predator-free without using fences, and to finish removing all introduced predators from offshore island reserves.

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