Learn the difference between gorse and kahikatea!
Date sent: Thu, 10 Jun 2004 15:10:07 +1200 From:
Geoff Keey United urged to learn difference between gorse
and kahikatea "Most school children in this country would
be able to tell the difference between a kahikatea tree and
a gorse bush, even if United MP Gordon Copeland cannot,"
Forest and Bird's Conservation Manager Kevin Hackwell said
today. Mr Copeland today repeated claims made in
Parliament last year describing the location of the proposed
Dobson hydro dam as being 'a few scrawny stands of gorse'.
"The proposed 500 ha hydro lake would inundate three
valleys covering 250 ha within the Card Creek Ecological
Area on the West Coast as well as reducing the Arnold
River's flow to one third of current levels," Mr Hackwell
said. "The Card Creek ecological area is one of the few
remaining areas in the Grey ecological district with valley
floor podocarp forest. It includes rimu, and an unusually
high proportion of kahikatea and matai. Much other valley
floor forest in the district has been cleared for farming,
forestry and other development and little kahikatea forest
remains anywhere in New Zealand," he said. Advocates
for the Dobson hydro dam are again understating its impacts
and will need to weaken the Conservation Act if they want
the proposal to proceed.
"We are particularly worried
that National, which protected the area in the 1980s, is now
advocating its destruction. Nick Smith is making a mockery
of the decision of his former colleague Jonathon Elworthy,"
he said. "National, Act and United need to make it
clear to New Zealanders whether they are proposing to weaken
the Conservation Act in a way that would open the door for
open cast coal-mining and other destructive activities in
New Zealand's most valuable conservation lands, because that
is the only way this hydro dam will proceed," he said.
"New Zealand is one of the world's worst wasters of
energy. It is small minded to call for the destruction of
an ecological area when so much more could be done to make
energy available for homes through less wastage, and money
saving conservation measures such as insulation and solar
water heating," he said "The proposed dam would affect
the enjoyment of canoeists and kayakers as well as river's
ability to support healthy fish and invertebrate
populations. Habitat for two threatened native fish species,
the giant and short jawed kokopu would be destroyed by the
flooding and the scheme would create barriers for species
such as long finned eels and kokopu which need to migrate to
sea to breed," he said ENDS
10 June 2004 -
Wellington