Rotorua community supports weed control
For immediate release: 9 December 2011
Rotorua businesses, iwi, lakeside communities and recreational bodies have strongly supported Bay of Plenty Regional
Council’s weed control operations on Rotorua lakes.
The Rotorua Te Arawa Lakes Strategy Group meeting last week heard that research had shown 83 percent of key stakeholders
supported weed control in key areas such as Hannah’s Bay, the Rotorua lakefront and Boyes Beach at Lake Ōkāreka.
Strategy Group Chairman and Rotorua Mayor Kevin Winters said aquatic weed infestation over the past 50 years had
resulted in major impacts on lake ecology, biodiversity, water quality and recreational use.
The Regional Council had responsibilities under both the Ten Year Plan and Regional Pest Management Plan 2011-2016 to
address biosecurity issues. The Council dealt with four major weed species which were in some but not in all lakes, so
the biosecurity programme looked at the use of weed cordons and extensive monitoring to prevent incursions into
unaffected lakes.
The programme also involved targeted control of lake weed around boat ramps, currently funded at $112,000 a year by Land
Information NZ. There was minimal direct targeting of aquatic pest plant control for amenity purposes, although some
areas such as Kawaha Point weed bed were treated, as strandings from the weed bed could have a major effect on Rotorua’s
lakefront, he said.
Over the past two years the Regional Council had received an increasing number of requests for aquatic weed control for
safety and recreational use.
“The impacts of aquatic pest plants on recreational and amenity values are currently not well addressed. Both the
Regional Council and Rotorua District Council have a mandate under the Local Government Act to take action where they
consider this is of benefit to the region and district,” he said.
A report had been commissioned to investigate the scale and nature of the issue, and determine the level of intervention
required from the Regional Council. The consultants collected feedback from a range of recreational bodies, commercial
operators and businesses, hapū, iwi and lakeside communities.
The rationale for controlling lake weeds was that they impeded swimming, boating and fishing, diminished water quality
and compromised aesthetic values. Pest plants rotting ashore in substantial quantities created a strong stench. There
was strong stakeholder support for Council involvement in controlling aquatic weeds, he said.
Recommendations from the report included creating a mechanism for public/private control on areas of low biosecurity but
high private amenity value. Public/private partnerships were supported by nearly 60 percent of stakeholders. $50,000 in
funding has provisionally been included in The Regional Council’s Ten Year Plan for aquatic weed control.
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