Three years in, how realistic is our Predator-Free 2050 goal?
From The Detail
Image: via ZEALANDIA Traps Weasel Intruder
It’s just over three years since the Predator Free 2050 goal was announced, with the aim of restoring New Zealand’s
spectacular bird chorus.
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When he announced it, then Prime Minister John Key described it as “the most ambitious conservation project anywhere in
the world”.
It has also been likened to New Zealand’s version of going to the moon.
There are pest-free projects in place all over the country – but can we really achieve this lofty aim?
On The Detail today, Sharon Brettkelly meets two people who are doing their best to help get there, waging their own
attack on predators on their 1300 hectare family farm on the Kaipara Harbour, north of Auckland.
They’re making headway. Gill Adshead says it’s like war time – bringing people together for a common purpose.
“The common purpose during war was the enemy … and the enemy is now predators,” she says.
She and husband Kevin live in an off-grid cottage in a secluded corner of their farm, from where they can hear at least
three pairs of kiwi calling.
The couple has set up the Forest Bridge Trust to create a pest-free, coast-to-coast corridor of more than 100,000
hectares across this slice of the upper North Island.
It’s not something they imagined doing when they were raising their children on the farm.
“We didn’t have time enough to even plant trees in those days,” says Kevin. “But since then we probably plant about
10,000 trees a year.”
They use a combination of traps – testing all sorts of new types – and 1080. Kevin says 1080 is needed every three to
five years to combat trap-shy stoats. Cats are also a huge problem.
“We catch more wild cats on this farm every year than we do possums,” he says.
Understanding how dangerous your cat is, is a start. Kevin says it’s important to be aware of the fact they’re natural
hunters – and to keep them in at night.
Pest control started in 2006, Gill saying they realised they shouldn’t be putting cattle into the bush in the winter
time any more.
“So the family made the decision to retire 400 hectares of the property,” she says. A lot of it was in bush and a lot of
it was marine wetlands. First the possums were killed off; then the rats; then the stoats. At that stage it was realised
the land would be ideal for kiwi.
The couple got the neighbours involved, and helped them with intensive trapping plans. Those plans expanded to the
Forest Bridge Trust idea. So far the Trust has spent nearly a million dollars, with funding from Auckland Council, DoC
and other public agencies.
Auckland Council is spending a lot of money on deer, pig and goat control.
It’s a costly effort – fencing off streams for example is hugely expensive, at $25,000 a kilometre.
But Gill says you have to have tangible goals, and even if the land is not predator free by 2050, there will be a huge
tract of protected land where our unique species can reproduce and still live, with a low number of pests.
“It’s the knowledge – getting the next generation to understand that actually we’re all going to have a trap in our back
yard that we check every day, just like we clean our teeth.”