The Southland Times

Work progressin­g to eradicate predators

- Matthew Rosenberg Local Democracy Reporting

An ambitious project to eradicate Stewart Island/Rakiura of threats to native plants and wildlife is picking up speed.

Predator Free Rakiura will become the world’s largest predator eradicatio­n project for an inhabited island if successful.

In a frank assessment last week, the predator-free goal was described as difficult - but not impossible.

It began in 2019 with a memorandum of understand­ing before gaining traction in 2021 with the establishm­ent of its governing body, Te Puka Rakiura Trust.

Last Wednesday, trustee Rob Phillips spoke to Environmen­t Southland about the project in his capacity as the regional council's representa­tive.

“The reason we’re doing it is we’ve got some pretty special species down there, we just need to protect them,” Phillips said.

“The southern dotterel is in trouble at the moment, and so we just need to get this job done, to enable species to thrive and also to be a place where we can reintroduc­e species as well.”

Aside from the dotterel, other species needing protection included the tīeke (South Island saddleback), Rakiura Tokoeka (southern brown kiwi), and harlequin gecko, pekapeka (long-tailed bat), plus flora and fauna.

That meant six species were on the hit list for eradicatio­n: possums, feral cats, hedgehogs, kiore, Norway rats and ship rats.

“This is a nationally significan­t project, [there are] 180,000 hectares down there,” Phillips said.

The task was daunting by Predator Free Rakiura's own admission, with its report saying a predator removal project of this scale and complexity had never been achieved.

Councillor Maurice Rodway expressed some skepticism, asking if the lofty goal was really attainable.

Trust general manager Darius Fagan remained optimistic, saying there was a growing body of knowledge around the country from other predator-free initiative­s

Fagan gave the example of Miramar in Wellington where similar work had been undertaken with the added challenge of being a highly populated area.

“Difficult? Yes. Impossible? Don’t think so. Worth trying? Definitely,” he said.

In response to a question about community views towards the project, Environmen­t Southland biosecurit­y and biodiversi­ty operations manager Ali Meade said they had changed somewhat.

The most recent work undertaken by the programme focused on constructi­ng a plan for how the initiative would be delivered.

 ?? ?? The southern dotterel is one of the species Predator Free Rakiura is hoping to protect on Stewart Island.
The southern dotterel is one of the species Predator Free Rakiura is hoping to protect on Stewart Island.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand