Coromandel kauri need your help
Coromandel kauri need your help
Kauri 2000 is making an urgent plea to everyone enjoying Coromandel forests this summer to do their bit to help stop kauri dieback disease spreading here.
Kauri dieback is killing kauri on Great Barrier Island, and throughout Northland and Auckland. There is no cure, and the disease kills kauri of all ages, from seedlings through to ancient forest giants.
The Coromandel Peninsula has the largest population of kauri outside of Northland. The good news is, so far Coromandel’s kauri forests are still free of kauri dieback disease. However, we need to act now and everyone needs to play their part if we are to keep Coromandel kauri healthy.
The microscopic spores are spread through the movement of soil. Humans are the greatest risk, spreading the disease through dirty, muddy shoes, tramping gear, bike tyres, machinery – anything that comes in contact with soil.
Anyone who has visited kauri forests anywhere in
Northland, Auckland or Great Barrier Island is a high risk
of bringing kauri dieback here, and the influx of
summer
visitors increases the risk exponentially.
As a
responsible local, be a guardian for our kauri. Whether
hosting family or friends, or as an accommodation provider
or tourist operator, ask your guests
if they have
visited infected or at-risk areas, and help them clean their
gear
thoroughly.
If you have visited kauri forests
anywhere in the North Island, remember to clean your gear
before and after you enjoy the bush here. In particular,
don’t
use any footwear, poles, mountain bikes etc on
the Coromandel Peninsula that
have been used in infected
areas unless you’re absolutely sure the gear has been
thoroughly cleaned. That also applies to anyone who has
landed from Great
Barrier Island.
Remember the 3 S’s:
SCRUB your gear – remove all soil
SPRAY with disinfectant
STAY on the track and off kauri roots
It’s also just as vital that locals clean their gear before and after every forest visit, especially people such as pig hunters, trampers or pest control contractors who often visit different blocks. We can’t assume we haven’t got kauri dieback – it might be here but undetected - and therefore we need to act now to avoid spreading it around.
Before and after every forest visit, use hot soapy water to scrub away all traces of soil, then rinse or spray with household disinfectant to kill any remaining spores. Use disinfectant stations as well if these are provided.
Symptoms of kauri dieback include yellowing leaves, loss of foliage, dead branches, and bleeding gum at ground level and up the foot of the tree.
If you do find a kauri that looks infected take a photograph and record the location, and contact Jeanie McInnes, Biosecurity Officer - Technical Relations,
Waikato Regional Council, tel 07 859 0706 or 021 654094 if it is on private land. If on Department of Conservation land contact Kevin Carter, Conservation Services
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