Otago Daily Times

Contract awarded to revegetate forest site with native species

- STAFF REPORTER

TE Tapu o Tāne and e3Scientif­ic Ltd have been awarded a major contract to recloak the Coronet Forest site, a project expected to take up to seven years.

Queenstown Lakes District Council community services general manager Ken Bailey said the forest, between Arthurs Point and Arrowtown, was harvested between January 2020 and May last year, during which more than 90,0000 tonnes of timber was removed, and with it a major wilding source.

The plan was to return native species, including tawhai rauriki (mountain beach), kōwhai, kōhūhū (pittosporu­m) and kapuka (broadleaf) to the forest to help restore the biodiversi­ty values.

Te Tapu o Tāne chief executive Jana Davis said it was a very special announceme­nt for the organisati­on on behalf of Ngāi Tahu kī Murihiku and she acknowledg­ed Kāi Tahu ki Otago for all its support.

‘‘The Coronet Forest kaupapa is all about building on the partnershi­p between QLDC, mana whenua, Te Tapu o Tāne and Citycare Property, as well as the kaimahi at e3Scientif­ic.

‘‘On behalf of all our partners it is a privilege to be delivering this kaupapa for our hometown and building the Wakatipu Basin towards a deafening dawn chorus of taonga manu [native birds] and providing access to the largest indigenous reforestat­ion project in the history of the basin.’’

The project would also provide opportunit­ies to support regional developmen­t, including local employment and training.

There would be several workshops over the next year as the team readied the site to come alive with ecosourced trees and plants and scaledup intensive pest control, Mr Davis said.

‘It’s going to be great seeing the new direction for the maunga [mountain],’’ he said.

Managing director of e3Scientif­ic Glenn Davis said the forest stood on the shoulders of a significan­t network of ecological restoratio­n work which had developed in the district over the past 20 years.

‘‘These projects have provided the ecological community with the skills, expertise and confidence to reinstate local biodiversi­ty at a landscape scale.

‘‘The role of e3Scientif­ic is to bring together and impart the knowledge we have gained to maximise the performanc­e of the plantings and ensure that the project leads the delivery of largescale ecological restoratio­n in Aotearoa New Zealand.’’

Native planting was expected to start next March, he said.

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? The site of the former Coronet Forest.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED The site of the former Coronet Forest.

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