$4.3 Million Funding Announced for $15 Million Programme to Make Dunedin Predator Free
Wednesday 3 October 2018
Dunedin: Predator Free 2050 Ltd will contribute $4.33 million to the five-year $15 million Predator Free Dunedin
project, ensuring the city retains its crown as NZ’s wildlife capital.
In Dunedin this morning (Wednesday 3 October), 130 guests from 20 organisations joined Conservation Minister Eugenie
Sage to celebrate the launch of Predator Free Dunedin.
“The Dunedin and wider Otago community has already shown its conservation leadership, with successful projects like
Orokonui Ecosanctuary and Orokonui Halo,” Eugenie Sage said. “I look forward to seeing the return to the city of
healthier populations of native plants and wildlife and a continued increase in public involvement in creating safe
spaces for our distinctive indigenous species.”
Twenty agencies, environmental trusts, research institutions and mana whenua groups are working together under one
umbrella to achieve predator free status over 31,000 hectares. Last year the organisations signed an MOU to work
together on a Predator Free Dunedin management plan. It now has a budget of $15 million over five years, including $4.33
million from Predator Free 2050 Limited announced today. Predator Free 2050 Limited has recently announced funding for
four large-scale landscape projects in the North Island. This is the first in the South.
Predator Free Dunedin spokesperson Rhys Millar said funding from Predator Free 2050 Limited was an important catalyst
for the ambitious project. It will be used to support community-led initiatives to rid the city of introduced possums,
rats and stoats which prey on native wildlife.
Predator Free 2050 Limited Chief Executive Ed Chignell said “Predator Free Dunedin is an impressive, grand coalition
with capacity to make a huge difference. We want to ensure the city remains New Zealand’s wildlife capital and are
investing big in people power to achieve that.”
Otago Regional Council Chairman Stephen Woodhead said “The Otago Regional Council is contributing $1.5 million over 5
years to Predator Free Dunedin with the hope that it becomes a ‘whole of Dunedin’ initiative. There is considerable
activity occurring around pest management across Otago, but this community led approach is an exemplar for the rest of
the region. This is a project of reasonable scale and one of which, those involved should be immensely proud. Well done!
And on behalf of the Otago Regional Council and its staff we wish you the very best of luck with it.”
Over five years, Predator Free Dunedin aims to eradicate possums from the 9,000ha Otago Peninsula and to suppress rats,
possums, weasels, ferrets and stoats across 12,500ha of land surrounding Orokonui Ecosanctuary, between Aramoana,
Waitati and North East Valley. Predator Free Dunedin will build upon the great work undertaken by the Predator Free
Peninsula and Halo Predator Free Project to connect these areas with a new Urban Linkage project. Dunedinites will
collaboratively work to implement predator control operations in their backyards and in local reserves within the Urban
Linkage area.
Volunteers will be supported by Predator Free Dunedin to form suburban backyard trapping groups to establish and
maintain community trapping programmes through the provision of tools, best practice and resources. This support is
through the existing projects managed by Landscape Connections Trust and Otago Peninsula Biodiversity Trust and through
a new group being formed to co-ordinate action across the Urban Linkage.
Rhys Millar says Predator Free Dunedin will measure and monitor pests across the three key programme areas so they will
know when they have reached the goal of being predator free. He says the visible signs of success will be seeing taonga
species such as the South Island kākā, hoiho, South Island robin and rifleman dispersing and returning to parts of
Dunedin where they are still not currently seen.
The initiative has significant funding support from the Otago Regional Council, with the ORC pledging $1.5 million over
five years and linking eradication targets to its Regional Pest Management Plan. Dunedin City Council is contributing
$850,000 in funds and making a practical on-the-ground contribution by focussing its parks and reserves predator
management budget to the urban linkage areas, which amounts to a spend of $1 million over five years.
OSPRI's TB-free possum knockdown programme, costing more than $3 million is providing the basis for long-term sustained
control of possums across large parts of Dunedin's north environs. Significant co-funding has been contributed by
Predator Free Dunedin partners, including Maanaki Whenua, University of Otago, Landscape Connections Trust, Otago
Peninsula Biodiversity Trust and others. The volunteer effort, which is at the heart of this project, contributes
valuable in-kind support.
The 20 organisations that have joined together to form the Predator Free Dunedin Charitable Trust are: Kāti Huirapa
Runanga ki Puketeraki Incorporated, Te Rūnanga o Ōtākou, Dunedin City Council, Otago Regional Council, OSPRI New Zealand
Limited, Department of Conservation, University of Otago, Otago Polytechnic and Landcare Research New Zealand Limited
Landscape Connections Trust, Otago Peninsula Biodiversity Trust, The Otago Chamber of Commerce Incorporated, Otago
Natural History Trust, The Dunedin Wildlife Trust, Yellow-eyed Penguin Trust, Royal Forest and Bird Protection Society
of New Zealand Incorporated, Otago Peninsula Trust, The Pukekura Trust, Save the Otago Peninsula Society Incorporated
and Quarantine Island/Kamau Taurua Community Incorporated.
For more information visit predatorfreedunedin.co.nz
Twitter @PredatorFreeDun
ENDS.