Farmers should be responsible for looking after native plants and animals on their land
April 23, 2013
A University of Canterbury (UC) conservation biology expert says New Zealand farmers should be responsible for looking
after native bush on their land.
UC forestry professor David Norton says farmers are best placed to look after conservation on private land because of
the significant amount of land area involved (two-thirds of New Zealand) and the fact that the land tenure is largely
freehold.
``We need to find a new approach and this matches with what the Department of Conservation Director General has been
saying,’’ Professor Norton says.
``If native biodiversity is to be sustained on agricultural land, a new approach is required because the present one is
not working in many instances.
``Without a new approach, the biodiversity train wreck that lies ahead could exceed even our worst fears. We need trust
and respect between farmers, conservation interests, scientists and officials as the basis for a strong partnership.
``We need a new kind of rural advisor trained in ecological and agricultural science whose role would be to provide
biodiversity information, management and planning advice to farmers, and to help them apply for funding.
``We need to encourage conservation advocates, government agencies, ecologists and farmers to work together in
developing novel answers and solutions to farmland biodiversity problems.
``Farmers are in the best position to manage significant native biodiversity assets on their land. Farmers are not
afraid to be innovative. Society will applaud new initiatives that achieve their intended objectives, including novel
solutions that might raise eyebrows in traditional farming and conservation circles.
``Critics on both sides of the fence will need to permit new approaches to be trialled and evaluated for a reasonable
period of time, years rather than months,’’ Professor Norton says.
Conservation interests needed to recognise that most farmers want to do the right thing and protect native biodiversity,
subject to time, money, feasibility and the likelihood of success.
``Rural ecologists would help farmers sustain the most significant natural assets on their farms, but would also work
with farmers in better understanding their matrix management and its implications for biodiversity.
``These ecologists would be best located in existing local management structures such as district councils and thus be
close to the farmers they are working with.’’
Professor Norton has just released a book on the issue, Nature and farming: Sustaining native biodiversity in
agricultural landscapes, co-authored with Professor Nick Reid of the University of New England, New South Wales.
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