Whanganui Chronicle

Iwi runs biological audit

Survey to support plans for predator proof fence

- Denise Piper

Asurvey of the plants and species at the very top of the country will help inform plans for a Jurrassic Park-like predator-proof fence at Te Paki.

The biological audit is being run this week by New Zealand’s northernmo­st iwi, Ngā ti Kuri, with the help of about 30 scientists and science students from the likes of Auckland Museum and Unitech.

Since 2018, Ngāti Kuri has held long-term plans to create a large-scale predator-free area, with the 8.5km fence keeping pests out from Te Paki, including Cape Rēinga (Te Rerenga Wairua) and Cape Maria van Diemen.

The biological audit will show what high-value biodiversi­ty should be in this area and the pests that shouldn’t be there, said Sheridan Waitai, executive director of Ngāti Kuri Trust Board.

“It will include genetic testing as we’re seeing some of our plants hybridisin­g to build resilience.”

The predator-free concept will be informed by both science and mātauranga Māori (traditiona­l Māori knowledge), she said.

Ngāti Kuri’s rohe at the top of New Zealand is experienci­ng the impacts of climate change possibly more than in other areas of the country, including having a cyclone season and seeing introduced species like turtles, Waitai said.

The iwi will soon install its own climate station so it can gather its own weather data, she said.

Waitai and trust board member Toka Maaka went to Suva, Fiji, last

I learnt, essentiall­y, that what we’re doing at a community level really matters, because if we’re doing something and that’s scaled up collaborat­ively, that makes a difference.

week, where the World Wide Fund for Nature held a summit for Pacific indigenous leaders to share their experience­s of accelerati­ng climate change, plus ocean and nature crises.

The Oceania First Voices Regional Forum featured nearly 100 representa­tives from New Zealand, Australia, Fiji, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands.

The message from those attending was clear: the voices of indigenous communitie­s will be key to solving the climate and biodiversi­ty crises — but only if these voices are heard.

Waitai said it was sad to hear the firsthand experience­s of climate change across the Pacific, but there were inspiring examples of communitie­s taking action grounded in traditiona­l knowledge and cultural practice.

“I learnt, essentiall­y, that what we’re doing at a community level really matters, because if we’re doing something and that’s scaled up collaborat­ively, that makes a difference.”

Ngā ti Kuri recently received a $6.6 million grant from Foundation North to increase and sustain its restorativ­e work in the Far North.

But the iwi had a setback last week in its conservati­on efforts in its rohe, with the Government saying it will not establish the Kermadec Ocean Sanctuary.

Waitai said there are plenty of decisions that are outside the control of communitie­s and indigenous people, and that is what the Oceania forum was all about.

“Out of the some $460 billion spent on conservati­on, indigenous people get to see only 2 per cent of that amount, yet we’re the ones being impacted first and cleaning up the mess.”

Ngāti Kuri recently partnered with the Girringun Aboriginal peoples of Queensland to learn traditiona­l fire practices, to protect the environmen­t by preventing wildfires spreading.

Both Waitai and Maaka say they hope the forum in Suva will result in similar knowledge-sharing and advocacy projects in the future.

Sheridan Waitai, executive director of Ngāti Kuri Trust Board

 ?? Photo / NZME ?? Cape Rē inga is the best-known part of Ngā ti Kuri’s rohe but the wider area also includes highvalue biodiversi­ty which needs protecting.
Photo / NZME Cape Rē inga is the best-known part of Ngā ti Kuri’s rohe but the wider area also includes highvalue biodiversi­ty which needs protecting.

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