Canterbury Conservancy News Briefs Dec – Feb 2000
Launch of environmental education
programme
Black Stilt (kaki) summer
release
Dolphin Research
Beech
Forest Phenomenon
Kiwi Listening
Survey
VAMP up-date
Structures in
North Canterbury and Waimakariri
Penguins moved
to Banks Peninsula
Good Conservation Outcome for
Tekapo
Ngai Tahu Summer Programmes
Loch Katrine Gate Up-date
Entomological
Studies
Up-coming Events
Canterbury on the
cutting edge of Conservation Education
Canterbury’s new action oriented environmental educational programme will be launched in Christchurch in March by international head of World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), Claude Martin. This is exciting news for the organisers who have been working on the programme since 1995 and have seen their efforts come to fruition.
DOC is one of the supporting partners in the programme set-up with funding sourced by the WWF, in conjunction with the Christchurch College of Education, and also supported by the Canterbury Environmental Trust, the Canterbury Regional Council, and the Christchurch City Council.
Australian “Wild Man” educator Phillip Green considers this experiential based programme on the cutting edge of environmental education. “This is a first in terms of the partnership approach taken between agencies with environmental education responsibilities and NGOs. It’s also quite unique to have an experiential based programme take place over three days with pre-visit activities built in as well as post-visit actions.” Phillip has links with environmental educators around the world and was a Winston Churchill fellow in 1997, investigating environmental education in the USA.
nvironmental Education teacher, Toby Johnson, who will be running the “coast to the high country” programme from Christchurch to Craigieburn, is now in place and based at the Christchurch College of Education.
Toby
has been spending the last few weeks planning and organising
the pilot programme. After consulting with Waimakariri and
North Canterbury Area Community Relations Officers, Annette
Hamblett has worked with Toby on possible DOC topics, issues
and sites for inclusion in the programme, and gathered
together appropriate resource material for these.
The
project will be piloted with Years 7 and 8 at St Patrick’s
School on 9 March.
Largest kaki (black stilt) summer release
One of New Zealand’s critically endangered birds, the black stilt (kaki), received a helping hand from the Department of Conservation when 27 juveniles were released into the wild in January.
Local DOC staff, runholders and Girl Guides released the three-month old juveniles into a protected wetland in the Mackenzie Basin, where they were free to really test their wings for the first time.
Kaki Recovery Programme Manager Dave Murray said it was only the second summer, following a successful release last year when nine of the 10 birds survived the winter. “90% of those survived the winter and showed that releasing young birds in summer was an option for us. This has enabled us to run the aviary facilities at full capacity knowing that we do not need to provide facilities for all the juveniles over the winter.”
Only 4% of chicks raised in the wild survive to join the breeding population, whereas around 30% of captive-raised chicks survive in the wild. Mr Murray said he believed the survival rates had risen because of two management changes. “Firstly we have provided supplementary feed for the first month after release, by which time they have weaned themselves off the handouts and are completely feeding from the wild. Secondly we have added iodine to their diet prior to release.”
The need for iodine supplement was identified during autopsies of eleven sub-adults that died just after their release in September 1998. The 27 juveniles will be closely monitored for the first critical month following their release. After that they will be routinely monitored along with the rest of the kaki population.
Dolphin research
American marine scientist Greg Stone returned to Banks Peninsula in the last few months to continue with his Hector’s dolphin research. Dr Stone and Akaroa field centre supervisor Al Hutt have been surveying and observing Hector’s from Akaroa Harbour to Birdlings Flat. They were also down in Timaru talking to fishermen and observers about using pingers on fishing nets.
Dr Stone commented on the dolphins behaviour around Timaru as being a little skittish in a good, wild animal way, compared with the dolphins in Akaroa who are accustomed to being around boats and interacting with humans.
At the
same time Dr Stone was in New Zealand, his research team was
in Akaroa observing dolphin behaviour from a cliff top perch
to determine what kind of impact boat activities will have
on the dolphins.
As part of the two year study American
researcher Cynthia Nichols of New England Aquarium and four
students were scanning the harbour for dolphins, charting
the animals’ positions using a theodolite, and noting their
behaviour.
Ms Nichols says the data collected would be
analysed by statistician Dr Jenny Brown of Canterbury
University and written up in a report by June.
Cyclic
phenomenon in Hurunui Mainland Island
Beech forested
areas throughout the country have been experiencing a most
unusual cyclic phenomenon, and Canterbury is no stranger to
this trend. For the past two summers, beech trees have been
flowering and seeding prolifically. Usually with mast years,
the mice numbers rise because of the abundance of seed.
However, once the mice numbers return to normal, the stoats
resort to the birds as an alternate food source.
Mast
seeding occurs once every five to seven years says advisory
scientist Andy Grant, so having heavy flowering two years in
a row is very unusual.
At this point scientists are not
sure what effect this extra seeding will have on the food
chain system, but it is certain to boost the mice
population, and subsequently boost the stoat population.
“During this season, we’ve observed that the mice numbers
have not dropped as anticipated, so we’re not sure what the
consequences will be.”
Stoat control in the Hurunui
Mainland Island and the Hawdon Valley would continue longer
than planned, he said.
Other activities in the mainland island included vegetation monitoring in the north branch. A fence has been put in to exclude stock, deer and hares. Monitoring specific plots will help determine what kind of impact the animals have on the area.
Possum gut sampling is also on the menu in the north branch this summer, says Hurunui Mainland Island project manager Wayne King. “This involves monitoring the possum’s diet before poison is laid in the area and then comparing their diet after a period of poisoning. By reducing the possum numbers the forest will re-generate, and therefore the possums’ diet will change because there will be more palatable plant species in the area.”
Kiwi Listening Survey
In January a team
of kiwi listening volunteers went into the Lewis Pass to
listen for the haunting night calls of the threatened great
spotted kiwi (roroa).
The trampers spent two hours each
night in pairs on the hillside above the valley, listening
for the birds, recording the direction the kiwi calls came
from, and the sex of the birds.
The survey was part of the Kiwi Recovery programme sponsored by the Bank of New Zealand. It repeated the one that was done in 1994-95 in beech forest in the upper Nina Valley near Lewis Pass.
Volunteer leader Lesley Shand says enough kiwi calls were
heard to assume there was the basis of a viable population,
but it was difficult to determine the age structure of the
population and if they were having breeding success.
There are three discrete populations of roroa, of which
the largest extends from Kahurangi National Park to the
Buller River. The second population is in the Paparoa
Ranges, and the smallest population is in the Southern Alps
between Arthur’s Pass and Lewis Pass. As part of the Kiwi
Recovery Programme permanent count stations have been set up
in the South and North Branch of the Hurunui River in the
Hurunui Mainland Island and in Arthur’s Pass National Park
The current population estimate for the roroa is about
20,000 birds, and the only place in Canterbury where the
roroa is actively protected is in the Hurunui Mainland
Island in Lake Sumner Forest Park. Intensive predator
control of stoats and ferrets, as well as possum removal
(which disturb nesting kiwi and damage vegetation) is part
of the project’s integrated management approach.
DOC ornithologist John Kearvell says juvenile kiwi up to nine months old are unable to defend themselves which is why you need to get rid of predators as well as restore the forest home of roroa.
Up-date on Visitor Asset Management
Programme in Canterbury
In the last eight months the
Canterbury Conservancy has put a great deal of effort into
providing information about the VAM programme and the
possible implications it could have for each area in
Canterbury. For the Waimakariri Area, recreation users and
DOC have had 11 meetings to discuss the best possible
outcomes for the recreational sites.
North Canterbury Area is just starting to hold regular meetings with a sub-committee of user groups, and South Canterbury areas will be meeting in March to discuss the VAM programme in their area.
The decision to release the “possible outcomes” for recreational sites on an area by area basis, has prompted much discussion with user groups. Many recreation users have expressed concern over the future of visitor facilities (structures, backcountry huts, tracks, signs, roads and carparks, amenity areas, visitor centres, campgrounds and campsites) because it is unclear whether the facility base currently under DOC’s management can be sustained into the future.
So far, the VAMP process is about a quarter of the way through in Canterbury. Structures such as the bridges, boardwalks and viewing platforms have gone through the VAMP process, and as a direct consequence $330,000 has been added to the Canterbury Conservancy. This will be specifically targeted for visitor structures management.
Huts, tracks, campgrounds and visitor
information signs will all go through this programme and it
is possible these too may attract more resources.
Maintenance and repairs in North Canterbury and
Waimakariri
North Canterbury
The handrail and
structural work that was required on the Haylocks Bay ladder
has been completed.
Starting in March a
boardwalk section on the St James will be replaced, and
redundant boardwalk sections will be taken off. The useful
parts will be recycled.
Some redundant bridges
from the River will be shifted to new sites in the Aida Pass
area.
Waimakariri
All tracks originating
from the road in Craigieburn Forest Park and Arthur’s Pass
National Park have received their annual maintenance
(windfalls removed, vegetation cut back, track re-formation
where required)
Extending into the backcountry,
some of the more popular back country tracks such as Cass
Lagoon Saddle track and the Andrews Valley track have
received their annual maintenance.
Work on the
Upper Waimakariri Valley track is underway.
One
of the most significant jobs undertaken, has been the
removal of human waste from the category 2 huts : the
Edwards, Hawdon, Carrington and Goat Pass. Over two days
9500 litres of waste was airlifted out of the sites for
disposal.
Bealey hut had its fireplace removed
because the adjoining landowner was concerned about fire
hazards. The exterior cladding has been repaired, and the
interior and exterior walls are in the process of being
painted
A number of hut inspections have been
carried out especially in the Poulter Valley and the Upper
Wilberforce Valley.
Rare penguins moved to Banks Peninsula
Forty six endangered white flippered penguin
(korora) chicks have been airlifted from remote Motunau
Island to start a new life at Harris Bay, near Godley Head.
This move was part of the Port Hills 2000 project.
The
little white flippered penguin - only 30 cm tall, is unique
to Canterbury and one of three penguin species listed as
‘endangered’. It is now more at risk than the yellow-eyed
penguin (hoiho), whose rating has improved from ‘dangerous’
to ‘vulnerable’ thanks largely to a great public awareness
campaign.
The 50 day old fledglings were kept in their
burrows to let them settle for a night, then let out to make
their way to the sea. Their first entry to the water
imprints ‘home’ in their brains, and they will return to
Harris Bay.
World penguin authority, Dr Chris Challies
who has studied penguins for 25 years, hopes the new chicks
will boost the colony of 21 breeding pairs at Harris Bay,
and provide an educational and conservation resource. Over
the next 13 years it is hoped to establish a colony of 300
breeding pairs at Harris Bay and nearby Boulder Bay.
Since
1980 the white flippered colony on Banks Peninsula has been
decimated to less than a third of its numbers and
predator-proof fencing and predator trapping will be carried
out to assist the survival of these endearing
birds.
While on the subject of penguins, Akaroa field
staff report that two hoiho chicks, have been successfully
fledged on Banks Peninsula this year. These chicks, last
weighing in at a healthy 4.9kg and 5.9kg, have been banded.
They are the only two chicks of this vulnerable species that
are known to have survived this breeding season in the Banks
Peninsula area.
Good conservation outcome for
Tekapo
The Conservancy Statutory Land Management (SLM) staff recently concluded lengthy negotiations with Mackenzie District Council over the re-development of Tekapo township. Over the last four or five years the Council has been engaged in extensive consultation with locals and other interested parties regarding its plans for the township. The success of these plans relied quite heavily on Council obtaining freehold ownership of some relatively small areas of recreation reserve.
Coincidentally the Conservancy has for many years been trying to find a mechanism to protect valuable wildlife habitat at the Cass delta, and at the site of the Twizel Areas' major habitat development project at Mailbox Inlet. Both areas are situated on the western shores of Lake Tekapo.
The outcome of the negotiations is that Council will gain freehold title to the camping ground and ice-skating area which are already subject to long-term leases. It will also acquire an area immediately behind the current commercial centre that is needed for parking and as a through route for buses.
In exchange the Conservancy will acquire ownership of the Cass delta and Mailbox Inlet areas. Although the areas do tend to be slightly larger than is really necessary for habitat enhancement and protection, the current grazing practices are sympathetic to conservation needs and are likely to continue.
Ngai Tahu Summer Programmes
To celebrate summer and New Zealand’s cultural diversity, guided walks were held at Aoraki/Mount Cook and Castle Hill (Kura Tawhiti) during the summer by Ngai Tahu interpreter Marlene Mason.
Employed by the Department of Conservation, Marlene spent two weeks in Aoraki conducting guided walks twice a day in January. Marlene also took people on tours around Kura Tawhiti during the weekends in February. On a daily basis about 25 people accompanied Marlene during her ‘roving interpretative walks’ of the area, where she explained Ngai Tahu values and their association with the general area.
Kura Tawhiti is of special significance to the Ngai Tahu Hapu (sub tribe) of Ngai Tuahuriri. Their association with the area stretches back many generations. They made seasonal food gathering trips from Kaiapoi to the interior. Some of the food gathered in the Torlesse Range beech forest included kiore (polynesian rat), kakapo, kiwi, kea, kaka, kukupa (wood pigeon) and fern root. Another reason the Ngai Tuahuriri made annual trips into the interior was to secure their boundaries. Their territory extended from Kaiapoi near the coast inland to the main divide of the Southern Alps.
In
Aoraki/Mount Cook the local hapu had similar food gathering
traditions. Being from Te Umukaha (Temuka), Ngati huirapa
made a spiritual pilgrimage to Aoraki
almost every
summer. While in the area the iwi paid homage to their
ancestors, Aoraki and his brothers. The tapu associated with
Aoraki is significant to the tribal value and the recent
Ngai Tahu settlement Act provides a special protective
mechanism called a topuni that provides a public symbol of
Ngai Tahu manawhenua and rangatiratanga.
Loch Katrine gate update
Since DOC restricted access to the area north of Loch Katrine, many four-wheel drivers have used the booking system to gain access. It is a simple process to ring the Department in advance, book the time that access is needed, and obtain the current lock combination.
Despite the
publicity given to the restricted access, some people are
still driving up to the gate and ringing DOC on their cell
phones to obtain the combination number. This could cause
problems for some users, as the phone number is staffed only
during office hours: 8:00am - 4.30pm, Monday to
Friday.
The limit of 10 vehicles per day is working well,
as club bookings are open for negotiation with DOC, and no
problems have arisen.
Entomological Studies – by Euan
Kennedy
Six species minders from around the Conservancy
acquired new entomological skills in early December. Phil
Crutchley (Aoraki Area) contracted Rowan Emberson and John
Marris from Lincoln University’s Department of Ecology and
Entomology to conduct workshops in basic insect collection,
storage and identification skills. The course lasted four
days: two in the field, reeking of ethyl acetate, and two in
the laboratory, bristling with pins.
Day and night,
collection techniques were trialed around the Mt Cook
village, making a tiny dent in the local insect fauna. The
place was peppered with pitfall, Malaise and light
traps.
Rowan and John laboured the crucial points about labelling and packaging of field samples before everyone moved down to Lincoln University for sessions in sorting and taxonomy. This might have been considered the least rewarding part of the course, but in fact it proved to be revelatory.
First, we all discovered how woefully fat-fingered we were when it came to pinning delicate insects out for display. Second, the world of insects really only began to reveal its incomparable diversity through the floodlit lens of a microscope. The articulation of a beetle’s exoskeleton was matched for beauty by the delicate tracery of venation on the wings of a bumblebee. Sorry, a Bombus terrestris.
A quick traversal of taxonomy concluded the course. Rowan and John are assembling an idiot’s guide to insect identification for Canterbury Conservancy. We idiots were used to give the guide a dry run. By and large, we did fine which is no mean feat because insect identification down to genus level demands many more skills than bird and plant bunnies have to employ.
This was an excellent introduction to entomology. Not only did it offer practical skills easily applied for survey and monitoring, but it demystified what would otherwise remain an intimidating world of insect complexity. More importantly, it ignited an interest in a species dimension overshadowed by interests of longer standing.
Up coming
events
Motukarara Nursery will be holding its annual Open
Day on 16 April. This year the Open Day will be called
Canterbury Conservation Day to celebrate Canterbury’s
biodiversity. Over the last 10 years the Open Day has grown
in size and diversity to include a number of organisations
such as the Christchurch Environment Centre, Forest and
Bird, city, district and regional councils, Historic Places
Trust, Addington Bush Society and Scorpio Books.
Their stalls have highlighted different aspects of conservation, so it seemed fitting to call the Open Day something that reflected the wider scope. Nursery manager Jorge Santos said native plants would still be the main focus of the day, but other conservation issues and projects around Canterbury would also be highlighted. “It’s a way of heralding all the conservation initiatives happening around Canterbury, while also bringing people together for the nursery’s annual event.”
Well known New Zealand artist Nancy Tichbourne
will be giving a talk at Canterbury Conservation Day about
planting natives and exotics together. Nancy draws much of
her experience from her passion for gardening and painting.
For more information please contact: Jorge Santos (03) 329
7846