The Southland Times

Predator-free aim gathers steam

- EVAN HARDING

It’s remote and cold, but beautiful. Within 20 minutes walking we have seen yellow-eyed penguins, sea lions, southern royal albatross and listened to birdsong in a stand of flowering rata trees. This is predator-free Enderby Island, 460 kilometres south of Bluff and part of the subantarct­ic Auckland Islands group.

The small windswept Enderby Island in the vast Southern Ocean gives a glimpse of what a predator-free New Zealand could look like, Conservati­on Minister Maggie Barry says.

Barry visited the Auckland Islands this week courtesy of the HMNZS Otago warship.

‘‘When you come to a place like this you are looking at New Zealand the way it ought to be.

‘‘To have a place free of predators is a wonderful thing.’’

The bold, some would say impossible, aim to have New Zealand predator free by 2050 is gathering steam.

The predator-free focus is aimed at exterminat­ing the country’s rats, stoats and possums, because they are the biggest threat to the nation’s native plant and birdlife.

A company called Predator Free 2050, a Government-owned entity with a board of directors, has been set up to help achieve the aim.

It has specific mandates; developing ways of eradicatin­g pests, launching large scale eradicatio­n programmes, leveraging investment from other sources and linking with other groups that do pest control.

Warren Parker, chairman of the New Zealand Conservati­on Authority and a director of Predator Free 2050, said the eradicatio­n of possums, rats and stoats by 2050 was a focused goal.

‘‘It’s audacious, but so was putting people on the moon.’’

Predators had been wiped out on numerous islands, so who was to say they couldn’t be wiped out on the country’s main islands, he said from the Auckland Islands.

Technology was improving in the battle to kill predators and a bigger tool box was now available, and it would grow as technology advanced.

Walking around Enderby Island, Parker said its abundant mammal, bird and plant life, which had sprung back after pests were eradicated in past decades, showed what it was like before human impact.

‘‘Even just walking a couple of kilometres, we have seen sea lions and penguins, gone through rata stands, a windswept area with megaherbs ... and the bird life, giant albatross, dotterels.

‘‘This is a window into what a predator free environmen­t looks like.’’

Southern South Island Department of Conservati­on boss Allan Munn, also among the contingent that went to the Auckland Islands, likened the battle against the rats, stoats and possums on the mainland to fighting a war.

World War II was fought from the land, air and sea, he said. ‘‘We [DOC] know how to shoot things, trap things and poison things ... but on the side we must work carefully on new ideas.’’

The Predator Free 2050 goal was aspiration­al, he said.

‘‘We know we can make progress, as we have on the islands.

‘‘But we are hoping at some point in the next 30 years we will have a breakthrou­gh [in technology] so we can achieve those big goals.’’

Munn believed New Zealanders valued the wilderness more than they

 ?? 633803718 633803770 633799429 ?? Conservati­on Minister Maggie Barry visits the subantarct­ic Enderby island. A yellow-eyed penguin chick from this breeding season. A couple of sea lions have a play fight.
633803718 633803770 633799429 Conservati­on Minister Maggie Barry visits the subantarct­ic Enderby island. A yellow-eyed penguin chick from this breeding season. A couple of sea lions have a play fight.
 ?? 633803684 ?? HMNZS Otago waits in the harbour as Conservati­on Minister Maggie Barry, second from left, and some of the rest of the visiting party, walk up Enderby Island.
633803684 HMNZS Otago waits in the harbour as Conservati­on Minister Maggie Barry, second from left, and some of the rest of the visiting party, walk up Enderby Island.
 ?? 633803761 ?? Sea lions on the beach at Enderby Island.
633803761 Sea lions on the beach at Enderby Island.
 ?? 633799428 ?? Southern South Island Conservati­on director Allan Munn with two sea lion pups.
633799428 Southern South Island Conservati­on director Allan Munn with two sea lion pups.
 ?? 633803713 ?? Conservati­on Minister Maggie Barry checks out the megaherbs on Enderby Island.
633803713 Conservati­on Minister Maggie Barry checks out the megaherbs on Enderby Island.
 ??  ?? A southern royal albatross in flight.
A southern royal albatross in flight.
 ?? 633803773 ??
633803773
 ??  ?? The Auckland Islands Nature Reserve sign on Enderby Island.
The Auckland Islands Nature Reserve sign on Enderby Island.
 ?? 633803745 ??
633803745

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