INDEPENDENT NEWS

Didymo Message Motors Along

Published: Wed 17 Dec 2008 02:04 PM
Taranaki Regional Council media release
For immediate release
17 December 2008
Didymo Message Motors Along
The didymo message is hitting the road again in Taranaki.
The Taranaki Regional Council has begun a summer education campaign on didymo, targeting anglers, kayakers, boaties and other freshwater users throughout the region.
A Council-employed didymo educator will visit popular freshwater recreation sites with a message summed up in three words: Check, clean, dry.
Those are the procedures the Council and MAF Biosecurity NZ are urging all river and stream users to adopt in an effort to prevent the spread of didymo, a Northern Hemisphere invasive alga that is also known as rock snot.
Didymo education campaigns are being conducted by regional councils around the country over summer in partnership with MAF Biosecurity NZ.
Didymo was discovered in South Island waters in 2004. It is not yet known to be in the North Island.
It attaches itself to streambeds by stalks and can form large mats on the bottom of streams, rivers and even lake edges. Thick, ugly growths can adversely affect freshwater fish, plant and invertebrate species.
It can be spread easily, with a single cell in a drop of water able to start a new colony if released into a different waterway.
For that reason, people leaving streams and rivers are urged to:
• Check equpment for any debris and leave it at the site.
• Clean all equpment with detergent, bleach or hot water.
• Dry equipment and do not use it for 48 hours.
All items should be cleaned for at least one minute with a 5% solution of dishwashing liquid or nappy cleaner, dried to the touch and left for another 48 hours before use in another waterway. If this is not possible, restrict their use to one waterway.
Absorbent items require extra treatment, either with prolonged soaking in water heated to 45 degrees or above, or by being frozen solid. People who hold fishing licences are banned from using felt-soled waders or wading boots when angling for sports fish such as trout. The ban applies throughout New Zealand, including the Taupo fishery.
The Taranaki education campaign will involve personal approaches to river users and sessions with organizations such as clubs. It will continue until late March.
The Taranaki Regional Council is part of a Regional Didymo Group that also includes the Department of Conservation, Taranaki Fish and Game, Venture Taranaki and Trust Power.
Fish and Game Officer Allen Stancliff says it’s vital for users of river and streams to follow the didymo cleaning procedures if we are to have any hope of keeping rock snot out of Taranaki waterways.
“These procedures should be followed within Taranaki and by those taking fishing gear, kayaks or boats to and from other parts of the country over the summer period,” he says.
Information and detergent spray bottles are available at sports shops and Mr Stancliff urges recreational water users to take advantage of them.
Clubs and other organizations wanting to organize didymo education sessions can call the Taranaki Regional Council on 06 765 7127
For more information, see www.trc.govt.nz.
ENDS

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