The Northland Age

Wetlands are important — every day

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Northlande­rs are being urged to rethink the value of wetlands, which serve often under-appreciate­d but environmen­tally crucial roles including filtering, absorbing and storing excess waters for dry periods.

World Wetlands Day is celebrated every February 2, marking the adoption in 1971 of the Convention on Wetlands in Ramsar, Iran, but Northland Regional Council says they are of huge value every day.

Council chairman Bill Shepherd said healthy wetlands were effectivel­y the environmen­t’s kidneys, filtering rain, including floodwater, and storing it, which was especially valuable during dry periods.

“Climate change means extreme weather events like droughts, storms and floods are on the increase, which will make our wetlands even more important to us in the future. Wetlands also help fight climate change because they store carbon better than any other habitat on the planet,” he said.

NRC biodiversi­ty manager Lisa Forester said more than a fifth of the region had once been covered in wetlands, including vast swamps and gumland heaths extending from the edges of the Kaipara Harbour to Spirits Bay. Less than 5.5 per cent, less than half the national average, of those original wetlands remained.

Cr Shepherd said the regional council did a vast amount of work in the wetlands area, including its Top Wetlands Project, a database that had seen the ranking and prioritisa­tion of around 1000 Northland wetlands. Many others had not been recorded.

The council had contacted the approximat­ely 600 owners of the more than 150 of the highest-ranked wetlands, and was working with them via biodiversi­ty plans and funding assistance Hunting for rare Northland mudfish in a small area of gumland wetland behind Bay of Islands Airport.

for fencing and protection, including covenants where possible.

Ms Forester said 87 wetland enhancemen­t projects had been completed since 2014-2018, to which the council had contribute­d $389,000, with a further 24 projects currently under way.

Last year 21 wetlands received funding for fencing and protection, and the council aimed to target 25 annually for assessment of fencing needs and associated follow-up.

Wetland condition index monitoring, using national methodolog­y), was in place at 27 locations that had already been fenced under the council’s Environmen­t Fund.

“Monitoring began in 201l, and this summer is in its third cycle. Pleasingly, nearly all the degraded wetlands we’re monitoring have improved their scores, while those that were already in good condition have remained stable or improved,” she said.

Northlande­rs — farmers, iwi and small block owners — cared deeply about their wetlands, and the results were testament to that, she said.

“This is not just through fencing, but with pest and weed control in most cases. Wetland owners often come and help with the monitoring, and get pretty excited when they see the condition scores improving,” she said.

Meanwhile Northland was home to almost all of New Zealand’s remaining viable nationally endangered gumlands/ wet heathlands.

A mapping project capturing remaining wet heathlands had been completed, and would help with the applicatio­n of new proposed regional plan rules, developed to prevent further loss of the endangered habitats.

Cr Shepherd said the council also carried out a range of biosecurit­y work on freshwater/wetland weeds and pest fish, including surveillan­ce, delimitati­on, survey and eradicatio­n, actively controlled pest species like koi carp, and responded to reports of others in the wild, including red-eared slider turtles and water dragons.

“And while undertakin­g threatened species work isn’t one of our key programmes, council is involved in work that benefits rare species that live in our wetlands, including bitterns, the nationally critical native bladderwor­t (support research), O¯ mapere quillwort, dune lakes galaxias research and tuna (eels) etc,” he said.

Informatio­n about wetlands can be found at www.nrc.govt.nz/wetlands

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