Taupo & Turangi Herald

Club donates $3000 for wetlands project

Tū rangi Garden Club donation for Project Tongariro

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Well-manicured gardens and wild wetlands might look different, but in Tū rangi they have been working together for a common cause.

The Tūrangi Garden Club recently handed over a $3000 donation to Project Tongariro for use in its restoratio­n project of Te Matapuna Wetlands.

The funds were raised through the club’s Garden Ramble event in November, when 16 avid gardeners across the southern half of Lake Taupō opened their gardens for public viewing.

The event’s support by long-time sponsor Bayleys Tūrangi and new sponsor Ryman Healthcare meant the cost of public tickets could be given to a charitable cause.

The garden club selects a local charity each year to receive funds from the ramble, with Project Tongariro being the highlighte­d cause this year.

Project Tongariro is a conservati­on organisati­on that oversees several local initiative­s including Greening Taupō, Predator Free Taupō and Kids Greening Taupō.

It also co-ordinates two major restoratio­n projects — the bush around Lake Rotopounam­u in Tongariro National Park, and at Te Matapuna Wetlands adjacent to Motuoapa on Lake Taupō ‘s southeaste­rn edge.

The wetlands project, which costs about $25,000 a year to manage, was this year’s beneficiar­y of Tū rangi Garden Club’s donation.

Although wetlands might not sound like beautiful or appealing places, they held a huge number of species important to New Zealand’s landscape, said conservanc­y botanist Nick Singers in a report for Project Tongariro.

To most people wetlands aren’t the most favoured place to recreate unless you want to shoot a few ducks in the season or paddle a kayak around a lagoon. Conservanc­y botanist Nick Singers

“To most people wetlands aren’t the most favoured place to recreate unless you want to shoot a few ducks in the season or paddle a kayak around a lagoon.

“It’s not as easy to go for a Sunday stroll through a wetland as you can do in a native forest.

“They are often wet, muddy and smelly and to the greater population are regarded as being ‘wasteland’ which could be better used as a dairy farm.”

However, wetlands, including Te Matapuna, were home to important, threatened native species, said Project Tongariro.

“The wetland supports population­s of two globally threatened species of birds, New Zealand dabchick and Australasi­an bitter, and an exceptiona­lly high diversity of plant and bird species, and is thus of special value for maintainin­g the genetic and ecological diversity of the region.

“The wetland is an important breeding area for various waterfowl including three types of cormorant, black swan, three types of duck, and scaup.

“The wetland is of special value for its endemic species and communitie­s.

“Sixteen endemic species of birds have been recorded in the area.

“The wetland regularly supports approximat­ely 4 per cent of the New Zealand population of black swan.”

According to Stats NZ, in pre-human New Zealand, wetlands covered 9.2 per cent of Aotearoa’s land cover.

Now, it accounts for just 0.9 per cent of land.

Project Tongariro has added thousands of plants to the 1500ha site in an effort to restore the wetlands’ health.

 ?? ?? Jacinta Buchanan (left), of Tū rangi Garden Club, presents its donation to Project Tongariro’s Shirley Potter.
Jacinta Buchanan (left), of Tū rangi Garden Club, presents its donation to Project Tongariro’s Shirley Potter.
 ?? Photo / Project Tongariro ?? The vast Te Matapuna Wetlands.
Photo / Project Tongariro The vast Te Matapuna Wetlands.

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