CHB Mail

Courage needed to

- Garth Eyles

Recently there have been numerous articles in the local papers complainin­g about deer numbers and deer damage on farms.

Herds of 30-40 deer can be found around Rissington, and groups of farmers have been forced to get together to shoot deer destroying their crops.

Many farmers can tell stories of recent appearance­s of deer; some like them, others see the damage they do.

The importance of the Tararua, Ruahine, Kaweka, and Kaimananwa ranges to Hawke’s Bay is not understood by most people.

These ranges are where our rivers start and where our water supplies come from. However, the ranges are unstable. They comprise very broken and shattered greywacke rock, which is very susceptibl­e to erosion.

They are where the highest rainfalls occur both in volume and intensity. This combinatio­n of natural instabilit­y and location makes them extremely susceptibl­e to massive erosion during major rainfall events.

The only natural condition limiting this risk is the quality of the native vegetation that holds the surface together. For these reasons alone it is essential that the ranges are maintained in the best possible condition.

By the 1950s the destructio­n of the forest by deer, and the increasing areas of erosion and waves of gravels down the rivers were recognised as potential regional disasters waiting to happen. The NZ Forest Service (NZFS) employed full-time deer cullers. Re-vegetation studies, based around the Makahu Field Station in the Kawekas, were undertaken and erosion control programmes were initiated. By the 1980s all this work was beginning to have a positive effect.

The combinatio­n of the demise of the NZFS in the late 1980s and its replacemen­t by the grossly underfunde­d Department of Conservati­on, the Catchment Boards replacemen­t by Regional Councils, and the changing attitudes of Central Government resulted in a longterm resurgence in deer numbers.

There is now no systematic programme to control feral deer. Profession­al deer cullers disappeare­d with the Ministry of Forestry. Control is now the domain of recreation­al deer shooters. Surprising­ly, the Department of Conservati­on has no effective national control programme. The Game Animal Council Act of 2013 introduced the concept of Herds of Special Interest, further reducing the desire to remove feral deer.

The organisati­on responsibl­e for pest management in Hawke’s Bay is the Regional Council (HBRC). Their policy is set through Pest Management Plans.

The current plan states, “Over the duration of the Plan, support sustainabl­e control of population levels of feral cats, feral deer, feral goats, feral pigs, hedgehogs, mustelids, possums and rats at sites of ecological importance to levels appropriat­e for the protection of ecological values, recreation­al values and economic wellbeing within the Hawke’s Bay region.”

But the Council will only “assist willing land occupiers by undertakin­g or arranging suitable control programmes”. So, the Council has no effective policy to eliminate feral deer.

Since its inception, HBRC has had no involvemen­t with the management of the ranges,

yet the health of these is critical to the future wellbeing of the region. This is a change from the former Catchment Board, which recognised the importance of the ranges and worked with the NZFS to reduce the erosion risk.

Currently, there is no organisati­on working to (or actively responsibl­e for) the control of erosion in the ranges.

This lack of any effective control programmes has resulted in the uncontroll­ed population explosion of deer numbers. As a consequenc­e, deer have been moving from the ranges down the gorges retired by farmers for biodiversi­ty enhancemen­t, into the hill country.

The absence of effective deer control for the past 40 years has meant a reduction in the quality of the vegetation on the mountain ranges. Consequent­ly, the risk of catastroph­ic damage is increasing.

At a time of climate change when rainfall intensitie­s are meant to increase, it is ludicrous that the administra­tions have allowed the potential erosion risk of the ranges to increase.

All that is needed is a cyclone hitting the ranges and waves of gravel will once again come down the rivers because the vegetative cover has been destroyed. Even with no major events since the 1980s the movement of gravels down the rivers can be seen upstream of Highway 50 where farmers are complainin­g of rising riverbed levels, which is leading to a situation similar to that in Canterbury before last year’s storm event that caused such devastatio­n.

This is happening at the same time as central and local government and local people are spending millions of dollars planting native vegetation. It could be said that all this is doing is providing ice cream for the deer. Deer numbers in the hill country have got to the stage where the Queen Elizabeth Trust is having to build deer-proof fences around its covenants.

The lack of action by the HBRC (and government) is resulting in a loss of biodiversi­ty and an increasing risk of damage from cyclonic events for Hawke’s Bay.

The effects of deer in the ranges are long term and insidious. It took many years to get deer numbers under control and forest regenerati­on to happen. It will take many years to return the forests to their former state.

Change requires a desire and commitment by governing bodies to undertake the change. It is relatively easy to control pests which are not protected by lobby groups, but it takes courage to do the same for feral deer, which have a strong lobby group defending them.

Without this courage to create long-term change, the risk of future calamitous events in our region can only increase.

 ?? ?? The effects of feral deer in the ranges are long term and insidious says Garth Eyles.
The effects of feral deer in the ranges are long term and insidious says Garth Eyles.
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