Hawke's Bay Today

Saving subantarct­ic island from pests huge challenge

Expert says spending nearly $80m over the best part of 10 years would be worth it. reports

- Jamie Morton

Clearing mammalian pests from the largest of New Zealand’s subantarct­ic islands could be done, an expert says — but it’d require a hugely challengin­g, decade-long effort costing about $80m.

Lying 465km south of Bluff, within the wild and windswept Southern Ocean, the 46,000ha Auckland Island is the last in the group where pigs, cats and rodents still roam.

It’s home to some of the most stunning and unique biodiversi­ty — but also pigs and cats that have devastated floral communitie­s and driven the local extinction of most seabird species that once bred there.

Only about 12, including the majestic Southern royal albatross, remain.

Mice, too, have hit the island’s invertebra­te population­s hard, while competing with native birds for food.

Since a five-year project succeeded in wiping out nearby Antipodes Island’s estimated 200,000 mice in 2018, the Department of Conservati­on (DoC) has been assessing how Auckland Island’s resident pests might be purged.

It’s explored in a special issue of the New Zealand Journal of Ecology this week, which brings together nearly four decades of insights gleaned from operations run elsewhere in the remote archipelag­o.

Its editor, Professor James Russell, expected an Auckland Island programme, from mobilisati­on to mopup, would take the best part of a decade.

“You’d need to take out the pigs with hunting, the mice with poison, then you’d turn to the cats, with a couple of years of follow-up and then de-mobilisati­on.”

DoC’s national eradicatio­n manager Stephen Horn, who led the Auckland Island research, described this week’s paper as having wrapped up

a four-year investigat­ion.

“An in-depth feasibilit­y study was needed as this would be the largest and most complex multi-species island eradicatio­n attempted to date,” he said.

“The team undertook large-scale field trials on the remote island to test adapted methods and emerging technologi­es, such as thermal cameras to detect pigs, camera traps to detect cats, prototype cat baits, and a reduced bait-sowing rate for mice.

DoC wasn’t positioned to start an

operation there now — funding was put on hold in April 2020 amid the Covid-19 crisis — but Horn said the critical groundwork had been done.

Russell, an island conservati­on expert at the University of Auckland, said that, compared with the work on the 2100ha Antipodes group, the scale of an Auckland Island project would be “massive”. It faced overcoming serious logistical hurdles — namely transporti­ng hundreds of tonnes of bait and teams to an island lacking key infrastruc­ture — and carefully balancing the eradicatio­n programme between its targeted species.

“There’d be a lot of complexity to it.”

While the operation had been costed at $79m, Russell didn’t consider that much to make 46,000ha of land pest-free forever.

“We’ve also got obligation­s — it’s the last island in the Subantarct­ic World Heritage Area to still have pests — so it’s a bit naughty of us to not be trying to get them off there.”

He expected a pest-free Auckland Island would be gradually recolonise­d by millions of seabirds — surveys already show snipe and pitpit rebounding at Antipodes Island — and lay a useful blueprint for programmes on other islands.

Clearing all of our uninhabite­d offshore islands — DoC manages about 220 larger than 5ha — remained one of several unfulfille­d short-term goals of New Zealand’s wider Predator Free 2050 mission.

A report last year found that just one of those — increasing the area in which predators were suppressed by one million hectares — had been achieved, with others progressin­g.

“The top islands remaining for us are Auckland Island, Rakiura/Stewart Island, Aotea/Great Barrier Island and Chatham Island — and if we could do it on them, we’d really be nailing it.”

 ?? Photos / NZME ?? A couple of yellow-eyed penguins on Enderby Island within the Auckland Islands make their way to the sea from high up in the sand dunes.
Photos / NZME A couple of yellow-eyed penguins on Enderby Island within the Auckland Islands make their way to the sea from high up in the sand dunes.
 ?? ?? The entrance to Smiths Harbour, Auckland Island.
The entrance to Smiths Harbour, Auckland Island.

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