Waikato Times

NZ: world leader for endangered species

- GED CANN

Seventy per cent of the public felt the state of New Zealand’s native plants, animals and fish was adequate or doing well last year, according to Lincoln University.

But co-author of the research Ross Cullen described this perception as ‘‘totally wrong’’.

The environmen­tal economist believes the misunderst­anding likely boils down to a focus on a dozen or so ‘‘charismati­c species’’ – the tui and kiwi of the world – where conservati­on efforts are concentrat­ed and which are heavily covered by media.

‘‘They read stories in the paper about another kaka chick saved or another sanctuary that has opened, and they seem to take that as informatio­n that the general state of our biodiversi­ty is safe – it’s not,’’ Cullen said.

‘‘We have 2800 species on the threatened and endangered species list. We have some of the highest proportion of threatened or endangered species than just about anywhere else in the world.

‘‘We have got about 90,000 species in total, only about 50,000 have been named, classified, etc.’’

Cullen says this put New Zealand as one of the worst countries for endangered animals.

While Cullen applauds volunteer groups, charities and the Gov- ernment for their efforts to turn the tide, it is only succeeding in ‘‘bits and pieces’’, and too often only for a small number of targeted species.

Environmen­t Minister Nick Smith said: ‘‘There are some difference­s between New Zealanders’ perception­s of our environmen­t and the reality.’’

The Environmen­t Reporting Act, introduced in 2015, aimed to improve this through regular and accurate reports on our environmen­t from the Ministry for the Environmen­t and Statistics NZ, Smith said.

Forest and Bird chief executive Kevin Hague says dispelling the myth that New Zealand was pro- tecting its biodiversi­ty was one of the organisati­on’s biggest challenges.

Forest and Bird shines the spotlight on six forgotten species:

Hutton’s Shearwater seabirds breed only in Kaikoura and can sometimes be seen around Cook Strait.

The Hutton’s Shearwater Charitable Trust estimates between 20 and 40 per cent of burrows were lost in the November earthquake.

Since 2005, chicks have been moved to an alternativ­e site on the Kaikoura peninsula and the trust has raised money to build a predator proof fence at the new site, named Te Rae o Atiu.

Duvaucel’s gecko

is NZ’s largest gecko, growing up to 30cm.

Despite once being widespread, introduced mammals have drasticall­y reduced their numbers. ‘‘They now survive on a range of off-shore islands including in Cook Strait,’’ Forest and Bird spokeswoma­n Amelia Geary said.

Duvaucel’s were reintroduc­ed to the mainland at the end of 2016 when 80 animals were released in the Tawharanui Open Sanctuary on the Tawharanui Peninsula.

North Island weka was once widespread but now the only natural population exists in the hills between Opotiki and Motu.

‘‘They have been reintroduc­ed to a small handful of other sites including offshore islands but they occupy a tricky conservati­on niche as they can prey on other native species, making relocation­s problemati­c,’’ Geary said.

Whitebait is the juvenile form of five different native freshwater fish species. Four of the five species are in decline due to habitat loss, degraded waterways and pressures from commercial and recreation­al harvesting.

‘‘The only one that isn’t – banded kokopu – is declining, according to anecdotal reports,’’ Geary said.

Black-billed gulls are the most threatened gull species in the world, classified as nationally critical in 2013. The population is thought to have dropped about 75 per cent in 30 years.

‘‘We want to see better protection and pest control on their braided river habitat, which is becoming degraded due to commercial pressures,’’ Forest and Bird Canterbury regional manager Jen Miller said.

Long-tailed bats alongside short-tailed bats are the only two remaining New Zealand species, with the third, the greater shorttaile­d bat, already extinct.

‘‘Long-tailed bats are predated on by rats, stoats and cats. Because they roost in old trees, they are losing their habitat due to clearance of forest remnants in places like South Canterbury,’’ Miller said.

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