Rakitū Island Declared Latest Predator Free Island
Minister of
Conservation Eugenie Sage today declared Rakitū Island, off
the coast of Aotea/Great Barrier Island, predator
free. “I’m delighted to announce that with rats
now gone, Rakitū is officially predator free. This is a
major milestone because Rakitū is the last DOC administered
island in the Hauraki Gulf Marine Park to be made
pest-free,” said Eugenie Sage. “Rakitū will now
join more than 40 existing pest-free islands in the Hauraki
Gulf Marine Park, including Rangitoto, Motutapu, Motuihe,
Tiritiri Matangi and Hauturu/ Little Barrier Island. These
pest-free islands provide a safe haven for threatened native
wildlife including takahē, kākāpō, kokako, kiwi, geckos,
skinks, bats, wetāpunga and tuatara. “Rakitū
represents another step towards a Predator Free Aotearoa New
Zealand. The recovery of breeding populations of threatened
species on these taonga offshore islands, provides an
invaluable lesson in how we might restore native plants and
wildlife on mainland sites once introduced pests have been
removed,” said Eugenie Sage. Eugenie Sage travelled
to Aotea/Great Barrier Island to meet with members of local
iwi, Ngāti Rehua Ngātiwai ki Aotea and Department of
Conservation (DOC) staff, to make the
announcement. The operation to remove rats from
Rakitū island, off the east coast of Aotea/Great Barrier
Island, was a partnership between Ngāti Rehua Ngātiwai ki
Aotea and DOC and was carried out during the winter months
of 2018. A check of the island with conservation dogs last
week proved that rats had been eliminated. Rakitū, a
330 hectare island, sits on a native seabird highway that
spans a chain of pest-free islands from the Poor Knights
Islands, north of Whangarei, to the Mercury Islands, south
of Aotea/Great Barrier Island. Now that Rakitū is rat
free, there is an opportunity to begin developing a
restoration programme for the island which had been farmed
for more than a
century. ENDS Photos and videos of Rakitū for publication
can be found here. · Rakitū had thriving breeding
colonies of native birds, particularly seabirds, before rats
were introduced to the island. Kakariki, ōi/ grey-faced
petrel, pōpokotea/whitehead, korimako/bellbird,
toitoi/North Island tomtit and pīhoiho/New Zealand pipit
once bred on the 330 hectare Island · Covering 330
ha, Rakitū's sheer cliffs rise 180 meters from the sea in
places, giving it an imposing fortress-like appearance.
Rakitū Island became a Scenic Reserve in 1994 after being
purchased by DOC, with Natural Heritage Fund assistance,
from the Rope family. · North Island weka on Rakitū
are abundant and not indigenous to the island. They were
released on the island in 1951, 36 years before DOC was
established when the North Island weka population on
mainland North Island was declining. Today, the North Island
weka population is increasing. · More than 60 weka
were removed for the rat eradication then returned to
Rakitū 5 months
later.Notes to
editors:
Background
information: