Otago Daily Times

Trapping to protect birds

Queenstown: Stoats, cats targeted

- GUY WILLIAMS PHOTO: ODT FILES

LIFE is about to get harder for stoats and cats preying on rare birds in the ReesDart river delta.

A contractor for the Routeburn Dart Wildlife Trust will next month begin setting up nearly 1000 traps in the braided river habitat at the head of Lake Wakatipu.

Trust executive officer Geoff Hughes said the trust had raised more than $200,000 in the past six months to establish the trapline.

That included $100,000 from the Central Lakes Trust and grants from the Otago Community Trust, Otago Regional Council, the Greenwood Environmen­tal Trust and proceeds from a fundraisin­g ball in August organised by tourism company Real Journeys.

Set up in 2013, the trust already funds predator control work beside the Routeburn Track in the upper Routeburn Valley and Hollyford Face. The traps kill rats and stoats preying on declining population­s of forest and alpine bird species.

Now the trust is throwing its blanket of protection over the ReesDart river delta to protect five species classified by the Department of Conservati­on as either endangered or threatened: wrybills, blackfront­ed terns, banded dotterels, blackbille­d gulls and black stilts.

Dr Hughes said a specialist team of Wellington­based contractor­s would spend several days next month carrying out a baseline survey of the habitat’s bird population.

The results would be used to monitor the effectiven­ess of the trapping operation in the coming years.

He was pleased with the trust’s progress, which he put down to its businessli­ke approach and extensive consultati­on with government agencies, runanga and landowners.

The funding it had secured had come on the back of a feasibilit­y study, a detailed scoping report on the project’s logistics and a business case.

It was now turning its attention towards securing operationa­l funding to maintain the traps.

‘‘I think we’re going very nicely. We’ve had a good 14 months but we’ve got to keep progressin­g to sustain the project.’’

To that end, it would produce a promotiona­l video in the next few months.

I think we’re going very nicely. We’ve had a good

14 months but we’ve got to keep

progressin­g to sustain the project

 ??  ?? Trapping project . . . Routeburn Dart Wildlife Trust executive officer Geoff Hughes.
Trapping project . . . Routeburn Dart Wildlife Trust executive officer Geoff Hughes.

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