Intensive Effort to Beat Pest Butterfly Breeding
Intensive Effort to Beat Pest Butterfly Breeding
More than 200 great white butterfly
infestations were found and removed in Nelson Tasman last
month – more than double those detected in March - as
intensive efforts continue to beat an autumn spike in
butterfly breeding.
Great white butterfly
eradication programme field staff, numbering around 20 at a
time, carried out around 5200 garden searches in April
looking for the butterfly’s caterpillars and eggs. The
escalated search effort will be kept up during May.
Department of Conservation Motueka Area Manager
Martin Rodd said the success of the DOC-led programme to
eradicate the great white butterfly in Nelson Tasman hinged
on knocking back this autumn butterfly breeding spurt with
the help of local residents.
‘The number of
finds of great white caterpillars and eggs was well up in
April from 88 in March. We are finding more in part because
we have more field staff searching and also because there
are more infestations with this breeding surge.
‘Our field teams can’t get everywhere so we
are counting on local people looking for clusters of great
white butterfly caterpillars and eggs on garden plants and
reporting any found to the Ministry for Primary Industries
(MPI) hotline 0800 80 99 66.
‘Public reports
enable us to remove the eggs and caterpillars before they
become butterflies and breed and multiply. Female
butterflies can lay as many as 750 eggs so we have to get in
first and prevent that if we can.
‘In April
mostly eggs and tiny young caterpillars were found. Now the
caterpillars are larger and easier for householders to spot
which is leading to more calls coming in reporting these
which we are very glad to get.
‘These larger
caterpillars are speckled black and greyish-green with three
yellow lines along their bodies. Fully grown caterpillars
are around 50 mm in length and have lots of pale
hairs.
‘If we are going to have a chance of
success, we need people all over the Nelson Tasman region to
be looking out for eggs and caterpillars on the
butterfly’s favoured plants which include brassica
vegetables and nasturtium.
‘Although the
butterfly is mostly in Nelson city, with some finds also in
Richmond, the butterfly could fly out to new areas. Also
eggs and caterpillars could be moved into new locations on
brassica vegetables or plants people have
bought.
‘Last week three Australian pest experts
hosted by their Lincoln University colleagues viewed our
operation and said that we are on the right track which has
been really encouraging to hear.’
There have
been around 640 great white butterfly infestations found
since the pest butterfly was first discovered in a Nelson
city garden in 2010.
The DOC-led multi-agency
programme to eradicate the butterfly is planned to run over
three years and aims to stop the major pest becoming
widespread in New Zealand. The species poses a serious
threat to native cresses and home and commercial brassica
crops. The butterfly’s mob-feeding caterpillars can
skeletonise plants.
The
help of Nelson Tasman residents is essential to eradicating
the great white butterfly:
· Householders are asked to look
for caterpillars and eggs clustered on the butterfly’s
favoured plants, including nasturtium, honesty and brassica
vegetables such as broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, bok choy,
kale and brussel sprouts. They may also be found on
rocket. Any found should be reported to the MPI hotline 0800
80 99 66.
· The young caterpillars are tiny and
yellowish with a shiny black head. The yellow eggs are also
tiny and closely-packed in groups of 30 to
100.
· People are asked to help kill
butterflies – it sounds harsh but is needed to beat the
butterfly pest.
· Patches of overgrown
nasturtium, a butterfly breeding favourite, are being
cleared. DOC is asking people to remove or cut back
nasturtium. If people don’t want to remove nasturtium
plants they are asked to keep checking them for caterpillars
and eggs and report any found.
· People are
asked to report patches of wild and unmanaged nasturtium to
DOC’s Nelson office, ph (03) 546 9335 or email motuekaao@doc.govt.nz
.
ENDS